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Infection and Immunity, September 2003, p. 4985-4995, Vol. 71, No. 9
0019-9567/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/IAI.71.9.4985-4995.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Multiple Elements Controlling Adherence of Enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli O157:H7 to HeLa Cells
Alfredo G. Torres
and James B. Kaper*
Center for Vaccine Development and Department of Microbiology and Immunology, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland 21201
Received 21 January 2003/
Returned for modification 27 March 2003/
Accepted 6 June 2003

ABSTRACT
Adherence of enterohemorrhagic
Escherichia coli (EHEC) to the
intestinal epithelium is essential for initiation of infection.
Intimin is the only factor demonstrated to play a role in intestinal
colonization by EHEC O157:H7. Other attempts to identify additional
adhesion factors in vitro have been unsuccessful, suggesting
that expression of these factors is under tight regulation.
We sought to identify genes involved in the control of adherence
of EHEC O157:H7 to cultured epithelial cells. A total of 5,000
independent transposon insertion mutants were screened for their
ability to adhere to HeLa cells, and 7 mutants were isolated
with a markedly enhanced adherence. The mutants adhered at levels
113 to 170% that of the wild-type strain, and analysis of the
protein profiles of these mutants revealed several proteins
differentially expressed under in vitro culture conditions.
We determined the sequence of the differentially expressed proteins
and further investigated the function of OmpA, whose expression
was increased in a mutant with an insertionally inactivated
tcdA gene. An isogenic
ompA mutant showed reduced adherence
compared to the parent strain. Disruption of the
ompA gene in
the
tdcA mutant strain abolished the hyperadherent phenotype,
and anti-OmpA serum inhibited adhesion of wild-type and
tdcA mutant strains to HeLa cells. Enhanced adhesion mediated by
OmpA was also observed with Caco-2 cells, and anti-OmpA serum
blocked adherence to HeLa cells of other EHEC O157:H7 strains.
Our results indicate that multiple elements control adherence
and OmpA acts as an adhesin in EHEC O157:H7.

INTRODUCTION
Shiga toxin-producing strains of enterohemorrhagic
Escherichia coli (EHEC) are a class of pathogenic
E. coli responsible for
numerous food- and water-borne outbreaks, causing a range of
illnesses from nonbloody diarrhea to hemorrhagic colitis or
hemolytic-uremic syndrome in humans (reviewed in references
16 and
19). Strains of EHEC O157:H7, the most common EHEC serotype
in North America, colonize the intestine and produce multiple
determinants, which cause the pathology associated with the
disease, with Shiga toxin being a key feature of virulence.
EHEC O157:H7 also harbor a large pathogenicity island, termed
the locus for enterocyte effacement (LEE), which is associated
with the intimate adherence to epithelial cells, initiation
of host signal transduction pathways, and the formation of attaching-and-effacing
intestinal lesions (reviewed in references
16 and
40).
The intestinal colonization process is incompletely understood. The LEE-encoded intimin and Tir proteins have been shown to be required for intimate adherence, with intimin being the only O157:H7 virulence determinant demonstrated to play a role in intestinal colonization in vivo (4, 14, 42). The finding that intimin-negative strains are still associated with bloody diarrhea or hemolytic-uremic syndrome (5) led several research groups to seek additional adherence factors expressed by Shiga toxin-producing E. coli strains. Several proteins have been proposed as novel adhesion factors, including Iha, implicated in adherence to HeLa cells when expressed in E. coli K-12 (35); Saa, an autoagglutinating adhesin produced by LEE-negative strains (18); and Efa-1, an adhesin from non-O157 Shiga toxin-producing E. coli serotypes necessary for in vitro adhesion to CHO cells and for colonization of the bovine intestine (17, 33). In the case of EHEC serotype O157:H7, very little is known about potential additional factors associated with adherence. Recent studies by Tatsuno et al. have identified transposon mutants of EHEC strain O157 Sakai with reduced adherence to Caco-2 cells. Such mutants mapped within LEE genes and in open reading frames (ORFs) not directly associated with adherence, which suggests that LEE genes are playing major roles in in vitro adhesion (37, 38). We recently characterized a fimbrial operon in EHEC O157:H7 that mediates adherence when introduced into a nonfimbriated E. coli K-12 strain, but EHEC strains mutated in this operon were only modestly reduced in adherence to HeLa cells (39). It is challenging to determine why, from the multiple regions in the EHEC O157:H7 chromosome with a putative role in adherence, only a limited number of genes within the LEE and other loci have been suggested to be involved in the adherence of these organisms to host cells. These data and previous reports led us to hypothesize that other unidentified factors are involved in the adhesion to epithelial cells, and their functions have been difficult to establish because their expression is tightly regulated during conditions of in vitro adherence. To address this hypothesis, we mutagenized the EHEC strain 86-24 and isolated hyperadherent mutants, which could represent relief from the putative repression of adhesion factors in vitro. Seven mutants were identified that showed an enhancement in adherence to HeLa cells, and sequence analysis of the transposon insertions revealed mutated genes associated with lipopolysaccharide (LPS) biosynthesis, amino acid metabolism, fimbrial biogenesis, and a gene of unknown function. One phenotype of a hyperadherent strain mutated in the regulatory tdcA gene was increased expression of OmpA, and we present data showing that this protein may contribute to adherence of EHEC O157:H7.

MATERIALS AND METHODS
Bacterial strains, plasmids, media, and growth conditions.
The bacterial strains and plasmids used in the present study
are listed in Table
1. Strains were routinely grown in Luria-Bertani
(LB) broth or on L agar at 37°C (
11). When indicated, the
bacterial strains were grown in Dulbecco minimal Eagle medium
(DMEM; Gibco/Invitrogen catalog no. 11885-084) at 37°C.
Antibiotics were added to media at the following concentrations:
kanamycin, 50 µg/ml; ampicillin, 100 µg/ml; chloramphenicol,
30 µg/ml; and streptomycin, 100 µg/ml.
Transposon mutagenesis.
Transposon mutants of EHEC strain 86-24 were generated with
the kanamycin resistance (Km
r)-encoding transposome EZ::TN <R6K

ori/KAN-2>
Tn
p (Epicentre catalog no. TSM08KR) by electroporation according
to the manufacturer's procedures. Briefly, electrocompetent
bacterial cells were transformed with 1 µl of the Tn
p transposome, 1 ml of SOC medium was immediately added, and the
cells were incubated at 37°C for 1 h. Transconjugants were
selected on L agar containing streptomycin and kanamycin. A
total of 5,000 independent transposon mutants were recovered,
and groups of five colonies were pooled together and maintained
in 96-well plates (Corning) containing LB broth plus 50% glycerol
at -80°C.
Bacterial adhesion to epithelial cells.
For both qualitative and quantitative adhesion assays, E. coli O157:H7 and its transposon or isogenic mutant strains were evaluated for their ability to adhere to HeLa cell monolayers by our standard protocol as previously described (39). Briefly, the strains were grown in LB broth overnight at 37°C and added to tissue culture cells replenished with fresh DMEM at a concentration of 107 bacteria per well for 6 h at 37°C. For adhesion studies with Caco-2 cells, monolayers were seeded with 2 x 105 cells/well and incubated for 48 h; after the cell monolayers were washed twice with phosphate-buffered saline (PBS, pH 7.4), the infection was carried out as described above. After the incubation period, the monolayers were washed, fixed, and stained with Giemsa solution for microscopic evaluation, or bacteria were recovered with 0.1% Triton X-100 in PBS and plated on L agar plates containing the proper antibiotic for quantification.
To screen the Tnp transposome mutant library for adherence ability, each pool of five mutants was grown in LB broth overnight at 37°C. The next day, bacteria and HeLa cells were incubated for 6 h in duplicate experiments. One set of experiments was fixed and stained with Giemsa solution for microscopic evaluation. In the other set, the adherent bacterial cells were recovered and reincubated in DMEM plus antibiotics overnight at 37°C. Bacterial pools that were more adherent than the wild-type strain after visual examination were further analyzed. The following day, a new adhesion assay was performed, and the bacterial cells still showing the hyperadherent phenotype were selected and incubated overnight at 37°C for a third round of assays. After the third adhesion assay, the bacterial cells were recovered and plated on L agar containing streptomycin and kanamycin. Six independent colonies from each pool appearing to be hyperadherent were selected, and their ability to adhere to HeLa cells was reassessed. Colonies displaying the phenotype were kept at -80°C, and the genomic location of the Tnp transposome was later determined as described below. Adherence data are expressed as the percentage of the bacterial inoculum recovered from triplicate wells and are the mean of the experiments. The statistical difference was expressed as the P value as determined by a Student t test analysis.
For inhibition of bacterial adhesion to HeLa cells experiments, bacteria were grown overnight in LB medium at 37°C, and 107 CFU were mixed with a preparation of anti-OmpA-specific antibodies (serum was diluted 1:10 or 1:100 in DMEM; OmpA antiserum was kindly provided by N. V. Prasadarao). After incubation for 30 min at 37°C, the mixture was added to HeLa cell monolayers, and bacteria were allowed to adhere for 3 h at 37°C. Quantitative and qualitative determinations were performed as described above.
Determining the transposon insertion sites in hyperadherent bacterial strains.
For each hyperadherent mutant, bacterial genomic DNA was isolated by using the Easy DNA extraction kit (Invitrogen), and 1 µg of the genomic DNA was digested with EcoRV. The digested genomic DNA was self-ligated by the addition of T4 DNA ligase and incubated overnight at 16°C. The ligated products were electroporated into SM10(
pir) cells, and the rescued clones were isolated on L agar plates containing kanamycin. The self-ligated clones were extracted by using the Wizard Minipreps DNA purification system (Promega), and the DNA sequence flanking the Tnp transposome was determined at the Biopolymer Core at the University of Maryland with the <KAN-2 FP-1> forward or R6KAN-2 reverse primers included in the Tnp transposome kit.
Construction of isogenic mutants.
Disruption of the ompA gene was performed in the chromosome of EHEC strains 86-24 and P9C8F2 (Tables 1 and 2) by a marker exchange procedure described by Datsenko and Wanner (3). The primer pair 5
ROMPA (5'-CGGACAACGGCATGCTGAGCCTGGGTGTTTCCTACCGTTTCGGTCCATATGAATATCCTCCTTAG-3') and 3
ROMPA (5'-AGCTGATCCAGAGCAGCCTGACCTTCCGGTTTCAGGGTTGCTTTGGTGTAGGCTGGAGCTGCTTCG-3') was used to amplify the cat cassette from plasmid pKD3 and introduced 46 nucleotides in each side of the cassette corresponding to the sequence of the ompA gene. The purified PCR product was introduced by electroporation into strains 86-24(pKM201) and P9C8F2(pKM201), and the transformed bacterial cells were plated on L agar containing streptomycin and chloramphenicol at 37°C. Colonies resistant to chloramphenicol and streptomycin were tested for ampicillin sensitivity. The presence of the disrupted ompA gene in strains AGT601 and AGT602 was confirmed by PCR with the primers 5RVOMPA (5'-CCGATATCGGTAGAGTTAATATTGA-3') and 3XBOMPA (5'-CCTCTAGAAAGCGGTTGGAAATGGAAG-3').
Preparation of whole-cell lysates.
Bacterial cultures were grown overnight at 37°C in LB medium
or DMEM, divided into aliquots containing ca. 2.0
x 10
8 bacteria,
harvested by centrifugation at 12,000
x g for 5 min at room
temperature, washed in 1 ml of 1
x PBS (pH 7.4), centrifuged
again, resuspended in 200 µl of sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide
gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) solubilization buffer, and lysed
at 100°C for 10 min. Cell debris was removed by centrifugation
prior to separation of supernatant proteins by SDS-10% PAGE
minigels as described by Laemmli (
8). Proteins were stained
with Coomassie brilliant blue.
Outer membrane preparations.
Outer membranes were prepared by the procedure of Torres and Payne (41), with the following modifications. Bacterial cells grown in DMEM were harvested in mid-log phase, pelleted by centrifugation, and resuspended in 10 mM sodium phosphate buffer (pH 7.5) before they were disrupted by using a French pressure cell at 18,000 lb/in2. The crude total membranes were collected by centrifugation at 100,000 x g, and Sarkosyl (sodium N-lauroyl sarcosine; Sigma)-insoluble outer membranes were separated from the crude total membranes by centrifugation at 100,000 x g. Outer membranes were resuspended in Laemmli solution buffer (8), and the proteins were separated by SDS-12% PAGE.
Western blot assay.
Proteins separated by SDS-10% PAGE minigels were transferred to Immobilon-P (polyvinylidene difluoride) membranes (Millipore) by using a Trans-Blot SD transfer cell (Bio-Rad) at 15 V for 22 min. Transfer of proteins was verified by staining the membrane with Ponceau S. The membrane was blocked with a PBS (pH 7.4)-0.5% Triton X-100 solution containing 5% nonfat milk. Incubations with primary (1:30,000) and secondary (1:30,000) antibodies were carried out for 1 h at room temperature. The blot was developed with enhanced chemiluminescence detection reagents (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech). The OmpA antibodies used in the present study have been purified, and their specificity was as previously reported (25).
Protein sequencing.
The proteins of interest were excised from Coomassie blue-stained SDS-polyacrylamide gels and subjected to in-gel proteolysis with trypsin. The fragments were separated by high-pressure liquid chromatography and subjected to matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization-time of flight (MALDI-TOF) mass analysis at the Protein and Nucleic Acid Facility at Stanford University. A mass spectroscopy fingerprinting profile from the mass fragments generated in the MALDI-TOF analysis was obtained by using the ProFound website (http://prowl.rockefeller.edu/cgi-bin/ProFound).
Construction of the ompA-lacZ promoter fusion.
An operon fusion with lacZ was constructed by amplifying the regulatory region of the ompA operon in strain 86-24 by PCR with Pfu polymerase (Gibco-BRL) by using the primer pair 5RIPOMPA (5'-CAGAATTCGCGCTGGCAACTCTGG-3') and 3BIPOMPA (5'-TGGGATCCCGATAGCTGTCTTTTTCATTTTT-3'). The PCR product was digested and cloned into the EcoRI and BamHI sites of plasmid pRS551, which contains a promoterless lac operon (31), to create plasmid pPOMPA.
ß-Galactosidase assay.
The E. coli strains containing the ompA promoter-lacZ fusion were grown with shaking at 37°C in LB broth, diluted 1:100 in fresh DMEM or LB medium, and further grown at 37°C to mid-exponential phase (i.e., an optical density at 600 nm of ca. 0.5 to 0.6). Cultures were diluted 1:10 in Z buffer (0.06 M Na2HPO4, 0.04 M NaH2PO4, 0.01 M KCl, 0.001 M MgSO4, 0.05 M ß-mercaptoethanol) and were assayed for ß-galactosidase activity by using ONPG (o-nitrophenyl-ß-D-galactopyranoside) as the substrate, as previously described (15).

RESULTS
Isolation of E. coli O157:H7 mutant strains hyperadherent to HeLa cells.
To identify bacterial factors involved in the control of adherence
of EHEC O157:H7 to HeLa cells, we randomly mutagenized strain
86-24 with the EZ::TN <R6K

ori/KAN-2> Tn
p transposome and
collected a total of 5,000 independent insertion mutants. These
Tn
p mutants were used to infect HeLa cells for 3 h and, after
the nonadherent bacteria were removed, the infected HeLa cells
were further incubated for 3 h. The cells were either Giemsa
stained for visual examination or the bacterial cells were recovered
for quantification and for further enrichment as described in
Materials and Methods. By this method, we were able to identify
20 Tn
p mutants that showed increased adherence to HeLa cells
but, after individual screening, only seven mutants reproducibly
showed the hyperadherent phenotype and were selected for further
characterization. When grown in DMEM these seven mutantsP6C6E25,
P9C8B1, P9C8F1, P9C8F2, P9C12D4, P10C9E1, and P10C4F1showed
growth rates comparable to those of the wild-type strain (data
not shown) and, in contact with HeLa cells, these Tn
p mutant
strains exhibited enhanced adherence ranging from 113 to 170%
of the wild-type level (Fig.
1). Furthermore, adherence of the
wild-type and the Tn
p mutant strains to the plastic surface
(24-well plates) was determined to rule out the possibility
that hyperadherence is a nonspecific phenotype associated with
the binding of these strains to epithelial cells. Our results
indicate that the Tn
p mutant strains adhere as poorly as the
wild-type strain to the plastic support, and the bacteria recovered
represented only 1 to 3% of the wild-type binding seen when
HeLa cells are included (data not shown).
Mapping the Tnp transposome insertions.
To determine the exact location of the Tn
p transposome insertion,
we performed genomic DNA extraction from each of the mutant
strains, and the purified DNA was digested with
EcoRV. Upon
self-ligating and transforming the DNA fragments into an
E. coli K-12 strain as described in Materials and Methods, the
resulting Km
r clones were subjected to DNA sequence analysis.
The specific site of the Tn
p transposome insertion was determined
based on basic local alignment search tool (BLAST) analysis
of the flanking DNA and homologous sequences deposited in the
NCBI database of EHEC strains EDL933 and O157Sakai. Based on
this analysis, the mutants could be grouped into the following
four functional groups: one mutant involved in LPS biosynthesis,
two mutants implicated in amino acid metabolism, two mutants
associated with fimbrial biogenesis, and two mutants disrupting
a gene of unknown function (Table
2).
The Tnp transposome in P6C6E25 was mapped as being inserted in the waaI gene (Tnp inserted after nucleotide 281 of 1,014), a putative LPS biosynthesis enzyme, located in the chromosomal region designated O-island #145 by Perna et al. (21). Two previous studies have shown that mutants deficient in expression of the O157 polysaccharide exhibited increased adherence to HEp-2 or HeLa cells in vitro (1, 2), supporting our experimental approach to identify hyperadherent mutant strains. Due to the fact that similar mutants have been studied before, we did not further characterize mutant P6C6E25.
Two insertions were located in genes associated with amino acid biosynthesis. Mutant P9C12D4 has an insertion in cadA (Tnp inserted after nucleotide 1642 of 2,190), the structural gene encoding the lysine decarboxylase (LDC) I enzyme. Compared to the wild-type strain, P9C12D4 was unable to catabolize lysine due to a lack of LDC activity as determined by a commercial assay for LDC activity (data not shown). The second mutant of this group, P9C8F2, had an insertion in tdcA (Tnp inserted after nucleotide 466 of 938). This gene encodes the transcriptional activator of the tdc operon, which encodes a pathway for the transport and anaerobic degradation of L-threonine.
Two more Tnp transposome insertions were found within genes associated with fimbrial biogenesis. Mutant P9C8B1 was mapped to the csgD locus (Tnp inserted after nucleotide 87 of 651), which encodes a transcriptional regulator of the csg operon encoding curli. Curli fibers are thin aggregative fimbriae involved in bacterial adhesion. A property associated with the production of curli is binding to Congo red dye. When grown in Congo red indicator plates, P9C8B1 colonies remained white, indicating the inability of the strain to bind Congo red. In contrast, the wild-type strain produced red colonies (data not shown). Strain P9C8F1 had an insertion in a gene located in O-island #154. This O-island contains five ORFs putatively associated with the production of fimbriae with homology to the long polar fimbriae of EHEC O157:H7 and Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium (39). The Tnp transposome is located in the fourth ORF (Z5221) of this putative operon, encoding a fimbrial minor subunit with homology to the lpfD gene of EHEC O157 and serovar Typhimurium. Based on the homology, we renamed this gene lpfD2 (Tnp inserted after nucleotide 685 of 1,070).
The final insertion was mapped within the same gene in two independent Tnp transposome mutants. Both strains P10C9E1 and P10C4F1 contained insertions in the yidE gene (Tnp inserted after nucleotides 638 and 700 of 1,685) of unknown function. Homology searches indicated that this gene encodes a putative transport and membrane-associated protein, and this gene is found in other Enterobacteriaceae, such as Shigella flexneri, E. coli K-12, and S. enterica serovar Typhi.
Differential protein profiles of the different Tnp transposome mutants.
In order to start identifying those proteins that are differentially expressed in mutants associated with the hyperadherence phenotype, bacterial whole-cell lysates of the wild type and Tnp mutants were fractionated in SDS-PAGE and visualized by Coomassie brilliant blue staining. As shown in Fig. 2, whole-cell lysates obtained from bacterial strains grown in LB broth did not show any obvious difference in the protein profile when the Tnp mutants were compared to the wild-type strain. Nevertheless, when the lysates obtained from DMEM were fractionated, at least seven proteins in the Tnp mutants were differentially expressed or showed a different electrophoretic mobility compared to the wild-type strain (Fig. 2). These proteins were excised from the acrylamide gel, and their identities were revealed by MALDI-TOF MS fingerprint analysis. The results indicated that the formate acetyltransferase I enzyme was differentially expressed in the P9C12D4, P9C8F2, and P6C6E25 (cadA, tdcA, and waaI, respectively) Tnp mutants (Fig. 2; protein is identified in lanes 2, 5, and 6 by a gray circle). In addition, the tdcA and waaI Tnp mutants showed two proteins that migrated faster in the acrylamide gel compared to the wild-type strain. MALDI-TOF mass analysis revealed that the proteins were GroEL and the glutamate decarboxylase enzyme (Fig. 2; proteins are identified by black and white circles, respectively). Besides these differences, we were unable to detect other proteins whose expression was affected in DMEM in the different Tnp mutants. These data indicate that the expression of some proteins is altered upon insertion of the Tnp transposome, but it is not simple to correlate the differential protein expression in whole-cell lysates in the mutants and the hyperadherence phenotype. Therefore, we decided to further fractionate the bacterial lysates and concentrate our analysis on disrupted genes with a confirmed role as regulatory proteins.
Mutant P9C8F2 differentially expresses an outer membrane protein.
Bacterial extracts of mutants P9C8F2, P9C12D4, and P9C8B, with
Tn
p insertions in the
tdcA,
cadA, and
csgD genes, respectively,
were further fractionated, and their proteins were separated
by SDS-PAGE. The protein profiles of the inner membrane fractions
of the three Tn
p mutants did not show any difference compared
to the wild-type strain (data not shown). In comparison, the
outer membrane protein profiles of these three Tn
p mutants revealed
at least two proteins differentially expressed in strain P9C8F2
(Fig.
3). The first protein (Fig.
3, black circle) showed a
modified electrophoretic mobility, and MALDI-TOF analysis indicated
that this outer membrane protein is associated with the transport
of long fatty acids. The expression of the second protein was
enhanced in mutant P9C8F2 compared to the wild-type outer membrane
preparation (Fig.
3, white circle). Mass spectroscopy fingerprinting
analysis indicated that the protein corresponded to the outer
membrane porin OmpA. In order to confirm that this protein was
OmpA, the outer membrane proteins of the wild type and P9C8F2
mutant were transferred to a membrane, and a Western blot was
performed with anti-OmpA antisera (kindly provided by N.V. Prasadarao).
As shown in Fig.
3, the antisera specifically recognized the
OmpA, thus confirming that the protein differentially expressed
in P9C8F2 corresponded to OmpA. The OmpA protein appears as
a doublet in the P9C8F2 mutant strain, but further analysis
and construction of isogenic
ompA mutants confirmed that the
proteins corresponded to only one OmpA protein (see below).
Furthermore, antisera raised against the OmpU protein of
Vibrio cholerae and previously shown to cross-react in Western blot
experiments with the OmpA protein of
E. coli (
32) also cross-reacted
with OmpA of strains 86-24 and P9C8F2 (data not shown). These
data indicated that the Tn
p mutant with a disruption in the
tdcA gene differentially expressed at least two proteins in
its outer membrane, one of them being OmpA. Due to previous
data indicating that OmpA participates in the
E. coli K-1 invasive
capability of brain microvascular endothelial cells (
25) and
that OmpU, an OmpA homologue in
V. cholerae, has adhesive properties
(
32), we decided to further investigate whether OmpA was participating
in the adherence of EHEC strain 86-24 to HeLa cells.
Transcription of ompA is slightly stimulated in the P9C8F2 mutant strain.
In order to determine whether the mutation of the
tdcA gene
in strain P9C8F2 is responsible for an increase in the expression
of the OmpA protein, we generated a fusion of the
ompA promoter
with a reporter
lacZ gene (plasmid pPOMPA) and examined the
expression of this fusion during exponential growth of strains
86-24 and P9C8F2 under different medium conditions. As a control
in our experiments, we used pRS551, the parent plasmid containing
the promoterless
lacZ gene. As shown in Fig.
4, the expression
of ß-galactosidase in LB broth was increased 1.5-fold
in strain P9C8F2(pPOMPA) compared to 86-24(pPOMPA). To determine
the effect of the medium on
ompAp::
lacZ expression, cultures
of 86-24 and P9C8F2 containing pRS551 and pPOMPA were grown
in DMEM. During exponential growth phase, ß-galactosidase
expression was induced only 1.3-fold in strain P9C8F2(pPOMPA)
compared to 86-24(pPOMPA). These data indicate that transcription
of the
ompA gene was induced during these in vitro conditions
and is slightly increased in the Tn
p mutant.
OmpA protein participates in the hyperadherence phenotype.
We then sought to investigate whether the hyperadherence phenotype
observed in strain P9C8F2 was associated with the expression
of the OmpA protein. To answer this question, we created a series
of isogenic
ompA mutants of strains 86-24 and P9C8F2, performed
quantitative and qualitative adhesion assays, and monitored
expression of the OmpA protein by Western blots with anti-OmpA
antisera. We first confirmed that the mutant strain was still
hyperadherent to HeLa cells and attempted to complement the
mutation with the wild-type
tdcA gene on a plasmid. As shown
in Fig.
5, strain P9C8F2 showed the hyperadherent phenotype
compared to the wild-type strain. However, the phenotype did
not revert to wild-type levels upon introduction of
tdcA gene
on a plasmid, suggesting that the Tn
p transposome is having
a polar effect on genes found downstream of
tdcA. We then tested
whether the mutation in the
ompA gene abolishes the hyperadherent
phenotype. When visualized under the microscope, strain AGT602
(
ompA::
cat tdcA::Tn
p) adhered as well as the wild-type 86-24
and did not display hyperadherence (Fig.
5). Quantification
of the adherent bacteria indicated that AGT602 adhered almost
as well as strain 86-24 (86.5% bacteria recovered, a 13.5% decrease
compared to the wild-type strain). Furthermore, whole-cell extracts
of the mutant strain did not react with the anti-OmpA sera in
Western blot assays, confirming that strain AGT602 did not express
the OmpA protein, a finding consistent with expression of this
protein being necessary for hyper-adherence. To further investigate
the role of OmpA in EHEC adherence to HeLa cells, strain AGT601
(
ompA::
cat) was generated and tested in a similar tissue culture
cell adherence assay. As shown in Fig.
5, strain AGT601 was
able to adhere to HeLa cells but to a lower extent than wild-type
strain (81.9% compared to 100% bacteria recovered in strain
86-24, an 18.1% reduction). Similar to AGT602, strain AGT601
did not express the OmpA protein.
We then investigated whether the antiserum raised against the
OmpA protein was able to block adherence of strains 86-24 and
P9C8F2 to HeLa cells. For both strains tested, adherence to
HeLa cells was greatly reduced at higher concentrations of anti-OmpA
serum (1:10 dilution) (
P < 0.05) and was almost restored
to normal levels as the serum was diluted 10-fold (1:100 dilution)
(Table
3, experiment 1). It is important that the antiserum
effect was more pronounced in strain P9C8F2 than in strain 86-24.
Even at a 1:100 dilution of the antiserum, the mutant strain
was unable to display the hyperadherence phenotype (
P < 0.05).
To confirm that the blocking of adherence was a specific effect
due to the anti-OmpA antibodies and not to the rabbit serum,
an additional experiment was performed to determine whether
the sera alone were able to inhibit adherence of the two strains.
As indicated in Table
3, experiment 2, rabbit serum had a slight
effect in blocking the adherence of both strains at the higher
concentration (1:10) that was not statistically significant
(
P > 0.05). At a 1:100 dilution, strains 86-24 and P9C8F2
adhere to HeLa cells as well as do strains incubated in the
absence of any sera. Together, these data suggest that OmpA
protein is playing a role in the adhesive properties of EHEC
strain 86-24 and in P9C8F2 is responsible for hyperadherence
to HeLa cells.
OmpA displays adhesive properties in other EHEC O157:H7 strains and participates in the binding to intestinal epithelial cells.
To determine whether the association of the OmpA protein with
adherence was not just a phenotype associated with EHEC strain
86-24 used in the present study, we repeated the adherence experiments
in the presence or absence of the anti-OmpA antiserum with different
EHEC and EPEC strains (Table
4). The strains tested were different
clinical isolates of EHEC O157:H7 strains EDL933 and 85-170,
and the prototype EPEC strain E2348/69. Our results indicate
that in both EHEC strains, adherence to HeLa cells was reduced
when the anti-OmpA serum was present (Table
4, an approximately
25% reduction when the antiserum is present), where adhesion
of the EPEC strain was not affected. The cumulative data strongly
suggest that OmpA is a potential EHEC adherence factor, and
the phenotype upon expression of this protein could be associated
with this particular class of pathogenic
E. coli strains.
The adherence studies described above were performed on HeLa
cells, an epithelial cell line obtained from cervix adenocarcinoma
that has been used extensively in the study of adherence patterns
of
E. coli strains, but since EHEC O157:H7 is an intestinal
pathogen, our interest was to determine whether this factor
is also associated with adherence to intestinal epithelial cells.
Therefore, we repeated the adherence experiments with Caco-2
cells, a colorectal adenocarcinomic cell line. We found that
the percentages of bacteria recovered ± the standard
deviations were as follows: 86-24, 100% ± 9.72%; P9C8F2,
121.3% ± 9.2%; AGT601, 86.5% ± 15.9%; and AGT602,
82.7% ± 16.2%. An 21.3% increase in adherence was observed
with the EHEC
tdcA::Tn
p mutant strain compared to the wild-type
strain, and a reduction in adherence was observed with the
ompA mutants (the adherence of AGT601 and AGT602 was reduced 13 to
17% compared to the wild-type strain, but the adherence of AGT602
was reduced 38.6% compared to the
tdcA::Tn
p mutant strain).
These results were comparable to the data obtained with HeLa
cells, even though the differences in adhesion were not as significant
as previously observed. Overall, our data indicate that OmpA
is acting as an EHEC adherence factor mediating binding to different
tissue culture cell lines.

DISCUSSION
Adhesion of pathogenic organisms, such as
E. coli O157:H7, to
host tissues is the first stage in the infectious disease process.
To understand how this organism interacts with host cells may
help to identify new targets for therapy or to establish the
effects that adhesion has on the cell and/or tissue to which
it adheres. Although a substantial amount of data has been generated
in recent years regarding the interaction of
E. coli O157:H7
with host cells and the role of intimin has been clearly associated
with adherence in later stages during infection (
4,
14,
42),
it is unclear which factor(s) is involved in the initial stage
of adhesion. Based on this premise, we began an investigation
of additional factors potentially involved in the adhesion of
E. coli O157:H7 to cultured epithelial cells. Our approach involved
the isolation of hyperadherent mutants which represent relief
from putative repression of adhesion factors in vitro. This
"gain-of-function" phenotype is beneficial because it could
lead to the identification of putative regulators and the conditions
that induce their expression. Similar approaches have been used
for successful identification of ClpP, a protease subunit that
modulates gene expression of
ail, a gene encoding the Ail adhesin
of
Yersinia enterocolitica (
20,
22), and of CsrA, a regulator
that affects glycogen biosynthesis (
28). Using a similar rationale,
we have found that adherence of
E. coli O157:H7 to HeLa cells
is affected directly or indirectly by multiple factors, such
as those involved in LPS biosynthesis, amino acid metabolism,
or fimbrial biogenesis. We also present evidence that OmpA has
adhesive properties and is required for
E. coli O157:H7 to display
the hyperadherent phenotype upon contact with HeLa cells.
Previous work by Bilge et al. (1) and Cockerill et al. (2) demonstrated that E. coli O157:H7 deficient in the production of O157 LPS side chains displayed an increased binding to tissue culture cells similar to the results that we obtained in our study. Those authors concluded that the presence of the O157 polysaccharide interferes with the adherence of E. coli O157:H7 and is not required to produce the attaching-and-effacing lesion. Our Tnp transposome mutagenesis analysis confirms these studies and, in addition, we identified other mutated genes that produce a hyperadherent phenotype, which suggests a direct or indirect role of these genes in adherence. Three of these mutations resided within genes encoding transcriptional regulators or otherwise associated with the control of virulence. The mutation in the cadA gene is of particular interest because, in addition to encoding the LDC enzyme responsible for metabolizing lysine, cadA has been proposed as an antivirulence gene in enteroinvasive E. coli and Shigella spp. (12). The authors of that earlier study found that introduction of cadA in S. flexneri affects the activity of two enterotoxins produced by this organism and that the presence of the by-product cadaverine, generated from the decarboxylation of lysine, caused attenuation in S. flexneri virulence (13). It is interesting to speculate that the cadA gene in E. coli O157:H7 serves to fine-tune the virulence of this organism by controlling the expression of putative adhesion molecules only under specific environmental circumstances.
Another gene disrupted in our analysis was csgD, whose product regulates the expression of curli. The curli are highly aggregated, extracellular fibers expressed by E. coli and Salmonella spp. that are involved in bacterial adhesion to host proteins and in biofilm formation (34, 46). In strains of Shigella and enteroinvasive E. coli, the csg locus has been shown to carry insertions, deletions, or mutations, suggesting that interruption of this gene is necessary for virulence (29). In the case of E. coli O157:H7, the csgD gene product may be controlling the expression of an adhesive factor required for binding to HeLa cells but not necessary for biofilm formation, since the mutant strain containing the transposon within the csgD gene was unable to form biofilms on polyvinyl chloride plastic plates (data not shown). Moreover, it has been reported that curli fibers are infrequently expressed during in vitro growth of E. coli O157:H7 (44) and that strains containing variations at the csgD promoter region, which induced expression of curli, are associated with increased virulence in mice and increased invasion of HEp-2 cells (45). Even though EHEC is not an invasive organism, we tested EHEC strain 86-24 and Tnp transposome mutants for their ability to invade HeLa cells and did not observe any increase in the invasion ability of the mutants compared to the wild type (data not shown).
A second gene encoding a regulator identified in our study is tdcA. This activator of the tdc operon has only been implicated in the control of genes responsible for transport and anaerobic degradation of L-threonine and has not heretofore been associated with any aspect of adherence. Using this Tnp transposome mutant, we were able to identify the differentially expressed outer membrane protein A. OmpA is a heat-modifiable class of protein highly conserved among the Enterobacteriaceae, and multiple functions have been attributed to it, including serving as a mediator in F-factor-dependent conjugation, acting as a phage and colicin receptor, acting as a porin and, in combination with lipoprotein, being required for the structural integrity of the membrane and the generation of a normal cell shape (7).
The role of OmpA in bacterial virulence has been extensively studied in E. coli K-1. OmpA was originally reported as a contributor to pathogenicity and serum resistance of E. coli K-1 both in vivo and in vitro (47) and was later demonstrated to mediate E. coli invasion of brain microvascular endothelial cells (25). OmpA was first identified as a contributor to transverse the brain-blood barrier on the basis of its structural homology with Neisseria Opa proteins (25), which are involved in invasion of eukaryotic cells. Subsequent work identified a human brain microvascular endothelial cell glycoprotein (gp96) as the specific OmpA receptor and confirmed the key role of E. coli OmpA in the initial steps of the invasion process (23, 24). Although invasion is not a property of EHEC strains, it will be interesting to investigate whether the contribution to adherence of E. coli O157:H7 OmpA to the human intestinal epithelia requires a specific cell receptor and whether this ligand-receptor interaction contributes to cell signaling associated with cytoskeletal rearrangement.
Even more intriguing is the recent finding that antigen-presenting cells recognize and are activated by Klebsiella pneumoniae OmpA, triggering cytokine production by macrophages and dendritic cells and the subsequent maturation of dendritic cells and signals via Toll-like receptor 2 (6). The role of E. coli O157:H7 OmpA or other E. coli OmpA proteins in the activation of antigen-presenting cells is unknown at present, but the data obtained with K. pneumoniae OmpA suggest that the immune system has acquired the ability to recognize this new type of pathogen-associated molecular pattern (highly conserved structures on microorganisms recognized by innate immune cells).
The role of an OmpA homologue in adhesion has been suggested for V. cholerae, where OmpU has adhesive properties in vitro (32), and this is regulated by ToxR at the transcriptional level. This global regulator also modulates the expression of another outer membrane porin by inducing OmpU and repressing OmpT (10). ToxR-dependent modulation of OmpU and OmpT seems to be critical for V. cholerae bile resistance, virulence factor expression, and intestinal colonization, suggesting a relationship between porin and pathogenesis (26). Our in vitro data support the role of the E. coli O157:H7 OmpA protein as a factor that seems to be important for adherence of different EHEC O157:H7 strains to HeLa cells and which also mediates binding to Caco-2 cells. We are intrigued by these findings and are now investigating the role of this protein in intestinal colonization, as well as attempting to identify the host cell receptor interacting with this porin.
In summary, we have identified several Tnp transposome mutants within genes associated with hyperadherence to HeLa and Caco-2 cells and determined that OmpA, an outer membrane porin, has adhesive properties and is associated with the hyperadherent phenotype in one of the Tnp mutants and with the binding of EHEC O157:H7 strains to HeLa cells.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We thank Laura Quinn and Kristen Kanack for critical reading
of the manuscript; William Nguyen, Jennifer Yarnall, and Susana
Oaxaca-Torres for technical assistance; and Diana Gomez for
maintenance of tissue culture cell lines. We also thank N. V.
Prasadarao (Childrens Hospital Los Angeles) for the anti-OmpA
sera.
This work was supported by grants AI41325 and DK58957 to J.B.K. and an RSUM grant from NIDDK and startup funds from the University of Texas Medical Branch to A.G.T.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Center for Vaccine Development and Department of Microbiology and Immunology, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD 21201-1509. Phone: (410) 706-2344. Fax: (410) 706-0182. E-mail:
jkaper{at}umaryland.edu.

Editor: A. D. O'Brien
Present address: Department of Microbiology and Immunology and Department of Pathology, University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston, TX 77555. 

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Infection and Immunity, September 2003, p. 4985-4995, Vol. 71, No. 9
0019-9567/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/IAI.71.9.4985-4995.2003
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