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Infection and Immunity, April 2003, p. 1794-1803, Vol. 71, No. 4
0019-9567/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/IAI.71.4.1794-1803.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center, Shreveport, Louisiana 71130-3932,1 Department of Veterinary Science, Louisiana State University Agricultural Center, Baton Rouge, Louisiana 70803,2 Department of Veterinary and Animal Sciences, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, Massachusetts 01003,3 Department of Microbiology and Immunology, East Carolina University School of Medicine, Greenville, North Carolina 27858-43544
Received 16 September 2002/ Returned for modification 12 November 2002/ Accepted 10 January 2003
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In vitro studies have shown that the addition of 2,3-DHBA to cultured murine macrophages infected with B. abortus results in increased numbers of intracellular bacteria at 48 h postinfection (25). This observation suggested that 2,3-DHBA acts as a virulence determinant by contributing to the intracellular survival of this organism. Subsequent studies employing a genetically defined B. abortus mutant (designated BHB1) that does not produce 2,3-DHBA, however, indicated that production of this siderophore is not required for wild-type virulence in either BALB/c (Brucella sensitive) (8) or C57BL/6 (Brucella resistant) mice (34). Preliminary studies with pregnant goats, on the other hand, suggested that 2,3-DHBA production plays a major role in the virulence of B. abortus in pregnant ruminants (B. Bellaire, C. Baldwin, P. Elzer, and R. Roop, Abstr. 100th Gen. Meet. Am. Soc. Microbiol., abstr. B-17, 2000).
The studies described in this report were undertaken to define the genetic composition and organization of the B. abortus 2,3-DHBA biosynthesis operon and to evaluate the contribution of 2,3-DHBA to the virulence of B. abortus in its natural ruminant host. The results of these studies suggest that B. abortus has the capacity to use 2,3-DHBA to produce a more complex catechol-based siderophore under certain environmental conditions, which is consistent with the recent report by González Carreró et al. (18) describing the production of a complex 2,3-DHBA-based siderophore known as brucebactin in response to iron limitation. The studies described in this report also clearly show that 2,3-DHBA production is essential for the wild-type virulence of B. abortus 2308 in pregnant cattle.
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TABLE 1. Bacterial strains and cloning vectors used in this study
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phage by using Packagene (Stratagene). E. coli SAB11 grown overnight in LB broth supplemented with 2% maltose was infected with packaged phage for 20 min. One milliliter of LB broth was added to the mixture containing infected cells, which was then incubated at 37°C for 1 h, and cosmid-containing transformants were selected by plating onto LB agar supplemented with ampicillin. Individual colonies were transferred to 96-well plates containing LB broth supplemented with ampicillin and incubated without shaking for 48 h at 37°C. Total DNA was prepared from these cells in the 96-well format, transferred to a positively charged nylon membrane (Immobilon; Millipore) with a dot blot apparatus (Bio-Rad), and cross-linked to the membrane by UV irradiation (Stratalinker, Stratagene). Immobilized DNA was screened by dot blot Southern hybridization for reactivity with a radiolabeled dhbC-specific probe (a 2.3-kb EcoRI fragment from pPS50) (8), generated by using [
-32P]dCTP and random priming procedures (43). Nucleotide sequence analysis of cloned DNA fragments was performed by the dideoxy chain termination procedures described by Sanger et al. (46). Computer-assisted analysis of nucleotide sequences was performed with the software program VectorNTI (InforMax), and the Basic Local Alignment Search Tool (BLAST) algorithm (3) was used to compare the sequences with the nucleotide and amino acid sequences currently deposited in GenBank. Genetic complementation of E. coli ent mutants. Restriction fragments encompassing selected regions of the cloned B. abortus DHBA biosynthesis operon were subcloned into pBluescript II KS+, and the resulting recombinant plasmids were tested for their ability to restore siderophore production in E. coli strains carrying defined ent mutations (Table 1). Halo production on CAS plates and the catechol-specific Arnow assay (5, 36) were used to measure siderophore production by the recombinant E. coli strains.
RNA isolation and analysis.
Total RNA was isolated from B. abortus cultures grown to an optical density at 600 nm (OD600) of 0.25 to 0.70 in brucella broth (iron replete) or brucella broth supplemented with 600 µM EDDA (iron deplete) by the RNeasy Total RNA isolation method (Qiagen) modified in the following manner. Cells from 10 ml of culture were collected by centrifugation, resuspended in 700 µl of Tris-EDTA (TE) buffer at pH 8.0, and vortexed briefly with an equal volume of chloroform. After phase separation, the aqueous phase was removed, incubated at room temperature with 300 µl of 50 mg of lysozyme per ml for 5 min, and then transferred to the Qiagen RNA isolation column. The remaining steps were carried out according to the manufacturer's instructions. RNA was recovered in 400 µl of nuclease-free water, and RNA preparations were treated with RQ1 RNase-free DNase (Promega) according to the manufacturer's instructions. The absence of contaminating chromosomal DNA was confirmed by failure of the gene amplification reactions to generate a product detectable by agarose gel electrophoresis, in the absence of reverse transcriptase. Concentrations of RNA in these samples were determined by measuring the A260, and these samples were used for both Northern and reverse transcriptase-assisted PCR (RT-PCR) analyses. For Northern analysis by slot blotting, equal amounts of RNA isolated from high- and low-iron cultures were cross-linked to a positively charged membrane (Immobilon; Millipore) by UV irradiation (Stratalinker; Stratagene) and hybridized with a dhbC-specific DNA probe generated by NdeI-EcoRI digestion of pEC-2 (Fig. 1). Determination of the transcriptional start of dhbC and the detection of specific dhb transcripts were performed by primer extension and RT-PCR, respectively, with the oligonucleotides listed in Table 2. RT-PCR analysis was performed with the Access RT-PCR system (Promega) according to the manufacturer's instructions, employing PCR cycling temperatures of 60°C for annealing and 70°C for extension. Amplification products were visualized alongside 100-bp DNA markers in 2% agarose gels after ethidium bromide staining. Primer extension was used to map the 5' ends of the dhbC transcript, and the methods employed, including [
-32P]ATP labeling of oligonucleotides by polynucleotide kinase, have been described previously (38).
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FIG. 1. Genetic organization of the B. abortus 2308 vihH-dhbCEBA-entD locus. Arrows indicate the direction of transcription and bars represent the cloned DNA fragments present in the plasmids described in Table 1. A functional transcription initiation site upstream of dhbC is depicted by an arrow and a predicted rho-independent transcriptional terminator located downstream of dhbA is represented by a stem-loop structure.
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TABLE 2. Sequences of oligonucleotides used in this study
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Genetic complementation of the B. abortus dhbC mutant.
To facilitate the complementation of the dhbC mutation in trans, the dhbC::Knr disruption present in BHB1 was replaced with an in-frame, nonpolar
dhbC mutation. The nonpolar dhbC mutation harbors the same 261-bp EcoRV internal deletion used for construction of the polar dhbC::Knr allele; however, the remaining portions of the dhbC open reading frame (ORF) were ligated together without introducing an antibiotic resistance cassette, resulting in the construction of plasmid pBH28. A 2.1-kb fragment containing the dhbC gene harboring the internal in-frame deletion was removed from pBH28 by digestion with EcoRI. This fragment was incubated with the Klenow fragment of DNA polymerase I (Promega) to fill in its protruding 5' ends and cloned into the SmaI site of pEX100T (47). The resulting plasmid construct was used in a sucrose resistance-based counterselection strategy (47) to introduce the nonpolar dhbC mutation into B. abortus 1. The nonpolar dhbC mutant constructed in this manner was designated BHB2. The genotype of this mutant was confirmed by PCR, and the 2,3-DHBA-negative phenotype of this strain was verified by the Arnow assay. A 2.3-kb EcoRI fragment containing the B. abortus dhbC gene was cloned into pBBR1MCS-4 (23), and the resulting plasmid, pEC2-M (B. H. Bellaire, P. H. Elzer, S. Hagius, J. Walker, C. L. Baldwin, and R. M. Roop II, submitted for publication), was introduced into BHB2 by electroporation (13).
Virulence assessment of B. abortus strains in pregnant cattle.
Virulence studies with pregnant cattle were performed by previously described methods (12). Pregnant mixed-breed heifers were infected with 107 CFU of B. abortus 2308 or BHB1 via the conjunctival route at the beginning of the 3rd trimester of gestation (
220 days). After abortion or birth, fetuses or calves were examined by necropsy. Samples of the lungs and abomasal fluid were collected and cultured. Heifers that aborted were euthanized and necropsied. For those heifers that bore live calves, milk samples from all four quarters of the mammary gland and intrauterine fluid were collected during the 48-h period following delivery and cultured. Approximately 1 month postdelivery, these heifers were euthanized and necropsied. Portions of the spleen, liver, and mammary glands and the supramammary, inguinal, and parotid lymph nodes were collected for bacteriologic culture. Bacterial isolates were identified as B. abortus by their colony morphology, Gram stain, urease and oxidase reactions, and reaction with B. abortus-specific antiserum. Blood was collected from the heifers prior to challenge and at necropsy. Serum was removed and stored at -20°C. Sera were evaluated for Brucella-specific antibodies by using the Rose Bengal card test (2).
Nucleotide sequence accession numbers. The nucleotide sequences of the B. abortus dhb operon and surrounding regions have been deposited in GenBank under accession no. AF302798.
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Genetic complementation of E. coli ent mutants with the corresponding homologs from B. abortus. Analysis of the nucleotide sequences surrounding dhbC suggested that the B. abortus dhb locus consists of ORFs encoding homologs of five (EntC, -E, -B, -A, and -D) of six of the enzymes involved in enterochelin biosynthesis by E. coli (16, 26, 32, 33). As noted earlier, we have designated the entC, -E, -B, and -A homologs in B. abortus as dhbC, -E, -B, and -A, respectively. Because the function of the B. abortus entD homolog has yet to be defined, however, this gene is presently being referred to as "entD." An ORF encoding a homolog of VibH, an amide synthase that participates in the synthesis of the 2,3-DHBA-containing siderophore vibriobactin in V. cholerae (21, 22, 55), was also detected. To assess the biochemical activity of these predicted gene products, selected restriction fragments from p2-9H were subcloned into pBluescript II KS+ (Fig. 1), and the capacity of the resulting plasmids to complement well-characterized E. coli enterochelin biosynthesis mutants was evaluated. Introduction of pPS50 and pEC6-B into E. coli SAB11(entC) and AN192(entB), respectively, restored the capacity of these strains to produce enterochelin. The latter finding is notable in that pEC6-B lacks the promoter sequences from the B. abortus dhbCEBA operon, and, consequently, expression of the cloned B. abortus dhbB in AN192 is likely dependent upon the activity of the lac promoter resident in the pBluescript II KS+ cloning vector. With respect to the B. abortus genes encoding homologs of enzymes involved in the conversion of 2,3-DHBA into enterochelin, introduction of pPS50 into E. coli AN193 (entE) restored enterochelin production by this strain, but the introduction of pEC6-B failed to restore enterochelin biosynthesis in the E. coli entD mutant AN190. Interestingly, introduction of pEC6-B failed to restore enterochelin production in the E. coli entB mutant AB1515.24 (53). EntB is a bifunctional enzyme: the isochorismate lyase activity of this enzyme is involved in the biosynthesis of 2,3-DHBA, while the serine phosphopantetheinylation domain of this enzyme participates in the conversion of 2,3-DHBA to enterochelin (16). The E. coli entB mutant AN192 lacks the isochorismate lyase activity of EntB due to a nonpolar point mutation in the corresponding gene, but retains the serine phosphopantetheinylation domain and corresponding enterochelin synthetase activity (formerly known as EntG activity) of this enzyme (53). The E. coli entB mutant AB1515.24, on the other hand, lacks both isochorismate lyase and enterochelin synthase activities (53) due to a polar mutation in the 5' end of entB created by the insertion of Tn5. Consequently, the ability of the B. abortus dhbB to complement AN192 but not AB1515.24 suggests that the B. abortus DhbB has lost its capacity to participate in the conversion of 2,3-DHBA to enterochelin. Loss of enterochelin synthetase activity by the B. abortus DhbB was not verified biochemically, however.
Genetic organization and iron-responsive expression of the B. abortus 2,3-DHBA biosynthesis operon.
Computer-assisted analysis of the nucleotide sequences of the B. abortus dhbC, -E, -B, and -A genes suggested that these genes are transcribed as a polycistronic message (Fig. 1). The polycistronic nature of the dhbCEBA mRNA and termination of the dhbCEBA transcript in the dhbA-entD intergenic region were confirmed by RT-PCR analysis employing primers designed to detect transcripts arising from contiguous genes (Fig. 2A). These studies also indicated that the B. abortus entD homolog is transcribed as part of a separate operon that includes an unidentified downstream gene. Transcripts arising from the B. abortus vibH were not detected. Consistent with dhbC, -E, -B, and -A being transcribed as a discrete operon, a region capable of forming a stem-loop structure (
G° = -13.3 kcal/mol) is present within the dhbA-entD intergenic region (Fig. 1).
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FIG. 2. Polycistronic nature (A) and iron-regulated production (B) of the B. abortus dhbCEBA transcript. (A) A schematic of the dhbCEBA operon is shown above the agarose gel analysis of the RT-PCR products generated with the primers listed in Table 2. Large rectangular arrows indicate the predicted transcript direction, small arrows represent the relative location of primers and solid bars depict regions targeted for amplification by RT-PCR. The small shaded box represents a putative Fur-binding sequence within the dhbC promoter region. Lanes 1 and 4 contain a 100-bp DNA ladder (NEB). The sample shown in lane 3 illustrates the 5' end of the transcript as well as the absence of contaminating DNA. Lane order and the predicted size of amplified products are as follows: lane 2, vibH internal (365 bp); lane 3, dhbC limiting (303 bp); lane 5, dhbC-E intergenic (585 bp); lane 6, dhbE-B intergenic (479 bp); lane 7, dhbB-A intergenic (321 bp); lane 8, dhbA-entD intergenic (334 bp); lane 9, entD internal (454 bp); and lane 10, entD-orfX (214 bp). The same DNase-treated RNA samples were used for all reactions. (B) Slot blot Northern analysis of total RNA isolated from B. abortus 2308 cultures grown under iron-replete (+) and iron-depleted (-) conditions with a dhbC-specific probe.
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FIG. 3. Relevant features of the B. abortus dhbCEBA promoter region. Transcript start sites are marked by +1, and the corresponding -35 and -10 regions are underlined. Putative Shine-Dalgarno (S.D.) sequences are also indicated. Oligonucleotides CStrt1 (P1) and CStrt2 (P2) used for primer extension analysis are indicated by arrows. Shaded boxes highlight predicted start codons, and large arrows indicate translated regions with amino acid sequence. Predicted Fur binding sites (15) are designated by boxed areas.
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FIG. 4. Primer extension analysis of the B. abortus dhbC promoter region. Primer extension products from Cstrt1 (P1) and Cstr2 (P2) reactions were loaded alongside end-labeled DNA sequencing reaction products to map the 5' ends of the dhbCEBA transcript (boldface). Lane designations of sequencing products are presented as being complementary to that of the transcript to allow for 5'-to-3' reading to coincide with the sequence presented in Fig. 3.
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FIG. 5. Repression of dhbC::lacZ expression in response to iron supplementation in B. abortus 2308. ß-Galactosidase activity was measured after culture of both strains for 48 h in either low-iron minimal medium alone (-Fe) or the same medium supplemented with 50 µM FeCl3 (+Fe) as described in Materials and Methods. The graph shown is representative of multiple experiments performed. ß-Galactosidase activity is presented on the y axis in Miller units (31).
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A two-step approach was used to confirm the link between the dhbC mutation in BHB1 and the inability of this strain to produce 2,3-DHBA in response to iron limitation. First, the polar dhbC mutation in BHB1 was replaced with a nonpolar dhbC mutation, resulting in the construction of BHB2. These two mutants carry the same 219-bp deletion in the dhbC coding region, the only difference being that this deletion was replaced with the aph3A gene in BHB1 (8), rendering this a polar mutation in this strain. Like BHB1, BHB2 is unable to produce 2,3-DHBA in response to iron limitation (Fig. 6). Introduction of a cloned copy of the B. abortus dhbC on a pBBR1MCS-based plasmid restored the capacity of BHB2 to produce 2,3-DHBA in response to iron limitation, confirming the participation of the dhbC gene product in 2,3-DHBA biosynthesis.
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FIG. 6. Genetic complementation of the siderophore-negative phenotype of the B. abortus nonpolar dhbC mutant BHB2 by a plasmid-borne cloned copy of dhbC. Catechol-type siderophore production by the B. abortus strains was determined with the Arnow assay (5) after 48 h of culture in low-iron medium. The results presented are from a representative experiment.
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TABLE 3. Virulence of B. abortus 2308 and BHB1 ( dhbC) in pregnant cattle
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In E. coli, the products of the entB, -D, -E, and F genes work together to assemble 2,3-DHBA and serine into enterochelin (19, 32). Previous studies have shown that B. abortus does not produce enterochelin, nor can it utilize this complex catechol as a siderophore (27). Consequently, although it was not surprising to find a functional entE homolog (dhbE) embedded in the B. abortus 2,3-DHBA biosynthesis operon, it was initially intriguing to find entD and vibH homologs flanking this locus. The recent description of brucebactin, a complex 2,3-DHBA-containing siderophore of unknown structure produced by B. abortus (18), however, offers a possible explanation for the presence of these genes as well as their close proximity to the dhbCEBA operon. This novel siderophore was identified through the failure of a B. abortus 2308 derivative carrying a Tn5 insertion in the vibH homolog to produce this catechol. VibH is a stand-alone nonribosomal peptide synthetase that utilizes a condensation domain (22) to fuse 2,3-DHBA to the polyamine norspermidine during the biosynthesis of the catechol-based siderophore vibriobactin in V. cholerae. Prior to this reaction in V. cholerae, 2,3-DHBA is tethered to the phosphopantetheinyl domain of VibB (a homolog of the B. abortus DhbB) through the activity of VibE (a homolog of the B. abortus DhbE) (29). VibD, a homolog of the B. abortus EntD, adds the phosphopantetheinyl domain to VibB. The functional domains required for the amide synthase activity of the V. cholerae VibH are highly conserved in the B. abortus VibH homolog (Table 4), and it is easy to envision a biochemical pathway in which B. abortus DhbB, EntD, DhbE, and VibH fuse 2,3-DHBA with a small nucleophilic molecule, possibly a polyamine or an amino acid, giving rise to brucebactin.
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TABLE 4. Conservation of siderophore biosynthesis domains in B. abortus DhbB, EntD, and VibHa
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2,3-DHBA production is not required for the survival and replication of B. abortus in cultured murine macrophages or its virulence in BALB/c or C57BL/6 mice (8, 34). Our results with pregnant cattle, on the other hand, indicate that 2,3-DHBA is essential for wild-type virulence in the natural host. These findings also corroborate those of an earlier pilot study showing that BHB1 is attenuated in pregnant goats (Bellaire et al., Abstr. 100th Gen. Meet. Am. Soc. Microbiol. 2000). The reason for the differential behavior of the B. abortus dhbC mutant in murine and ruminant hosts is unknown, but one particular phenotypic characteristic of this strain offers a possible explanation. Unlike its parental strain, the B. abortus dhbC mutant BHB1 displays considerable growth restriction in vitro when grown under low-iron conditions in the presence of erythritol (Fig. 7) (Bellaire et al., submitted). This defect can be alleviated by adding 2,3-DHBA or FeCl3 to the growth medium, or by genetic complementation of the dhbC mutation, and is not observed when BHB1 is cultivated in low-iron medium with other carbon and energy sources or when this strain is grown in iron-replete medium. At present, our experimental results suggest that utilization of erythritol by B. abortus imposes an unusually high physiologic demand for iron on this bacterium and that the biosynthesis of 2,3-DHBA is required to meet this demand (Bellaire et al., submitted). Erythritol is the preferred carbon and energy source of B. abortus (4, 51), and this four-carbon sugar alcohol is produced in large quantities by ruminant placental trophoblasts during the latter stages of pregnancy (14, 35, 49). Massive intracellular replication of B. abortus in these cells is associated with abortion (1, 14, 35, 42, 50), the cardinal clinical presentation observed with bovine brucellosis. It has long been postulated that the capacity of B. abortus to efficiently metabolize erythritol in the reproductive tract of ruminants plays a key role in virulence (49). Indeed, the attenuation of the bovine vaccine strain B. abortus S19 has been ascribed at least in part to its inability to catabolize erythritol (44, 45, 52). In contrast, erythritol is not a major component of murine tissues, and an isogenic derivative of B. abortus 2308 carrying Tn5 inserted in the erythritol catabolism operon retains its virulence in the mouse model (44). Combined, these findings strongly suggest that the basis for the attenuation of the B. abortus dhbC mutant BHB1 is its inability to efficiently utilize erythritol in the ruminant reproductive tract. Comparison of the phenotype of a B. abortus dhbC mutant with that of an isogenic strain carrying a defined lesion in its erythritol catabolism genes (e.g., eryA) (45) in pregnant ruminants will be important for better defining the relationship between 2,3-DHBA production, efficient erythritol utilization, and virulence in the natural host. Should subsequent studies verify the participation of dhbE, vibH, and entD in the conversion of 2,3-DHBA into brucebactin, B. abortus strains carrying defined lesions in these loci will be useful for separating the contributions of 2,3-DHBA and brucebactin to efficient erythritol metabolism and virulence in the bovine reproductive tract. Developing a genetic complementation strategy for B. abortus that can be reliably used in ruminants will be critical for these types of studies.
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FIG. 7. Growth of B. abortus 2308 and BHB1 in low-iron minimal medium and low-iron minimal medium supplemented with 0.5% meso-erythritol. The culture conditions are detailed in Materials and Methods, and the results presented are from a representative experiment.
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This work was supported by grants (95-09195 and 98-02620) from the United State Department of Agriculture's National Research Initiative Competitive Grants Program.
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