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Infection and Immunity, December 2004, p. 7326-7329, Vol. 72, No. 12
0019-9567/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/IAI.72.12.7326-7329.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Two tonB Systems Function in Iron Transport in Vibrio anguillarum, but Only One Is Essential for Virulence
Michiel Stork,1
Manuela Di Lorenzo,1
Susana Mouriño,2
Carlos R. Osorio,2
Manuel L. Lemos,2 and
Jorge H. Crosa1*
Department of Molecular Microbiology and Immunology, Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, Oregon,1
Departamento de Microbioloxia e Parasitoloxia, Universidade de Santiago de Compostela, Instituto de Acuicultura, Campus Sur, Santiago de Compostela, Galicia, Spain2
Received 15 July 2004/
Returned for modification 13 August 2004/
Accepted 30 August 2004

ABSTRACT
We have identified two functional
tonB systems in the marine
fish pathogen
Vibrio anguillarum,
tonB1 and
tonB2. Each of the
tonB genes is transcribed in an operon with the cognate
exbB and
exbD genes in response to iron limitation. Only
tonB2 is
essential for transport of ferric anguibactin and virulence.

TEXT
Outer membrane receptors for ferric siderophores require energy
to internalize the complexed iron. This energy is transduced
from the proton motive force in the inner membrane to the outer
membrane receptor by the TonB protein in complex with the ExbB
and ExbD proteins (
4,
10). The presence of
tonB has been associated
with bacterial virulence in bacteria such as
Vibrio cholerae (
16),
Shigella dysenteriae (
15), and
Bordetella pertussis (
13).
To be able to cause an infection in a vertebrate fish host, the marine fish pathogen Vibrio anguillarum requires an active iron uptake mechanism (2, 6, 8, 17, 21) mediated by the siderophore anguibactin (1); however, it can also acquire iron via transport of heme and siderophores secreted by other microorganisms, like ferrichrome and enterobactin (5). Anguibactin is synthesized via a nonribosomal peptide synthetase mechanism and secreted to the extracellular environment (9). Once bound to iron, the ferric siderophore is transported back into the cell cytosol through the specific outer membrane receptor FatA and a transport complex consisting of the periplasmic binding lipoprotein FatB and the integral membrane proteins FatC and FatD (3, 7, 12).
Ferric-anguibactin transport via the FatA receptor requires energy, suggesting the existence of a tonB complex in V. anguillarum (7).
The tonB, exbB, and exbD cluster in V. anguillarum 775 also includes the heme transport genes (Fig. 1). This tonB system shows homology to the V. cholerae tonB1 cluster: TonB1, 48% (GenBank accession number NP_233295.1); ExbB1, 74% (NP_233296.1); ExbD1, 72% (NP_233297.1). When the tonB1 gene was replaced with a chloramphenicol resistance cassette (MS533), no phenotypic difference in iron uptake could be detected by bioassays with different iron sources (Table 1). This indicates that at least one other tonB system must be present in V. anguillarum. By Tn10 mutagenesis (11) of MS533, the tonB1 knockout, we identified a mutant, MS570, that was unable to transport any of the iron sources tested (Table 1). The Tn10 insertion was cloned and sequenced, showing that it occurred at bp 935 of an open reading frame homologous (66% identity) to open reading frame 1547 (tolR) of the V. cholerae genome (accession no. AF047974.1). This V. anguillarum tolR homologue is located upstream of a second tonB cluster (Fig. 1), which shares homology with the tonB2 system in V. cholerae: TonB2, 68% (NP_231186.1); ExbB2, 87% (NP_231185.1); ExbD2, 62% (NP_231184.1). We then generated a tonB2 knockout strain by inserting the kanamycin resistance (Kmr) cassette (18) into the chromosomal locus of tonB2, with the suicide vector pTW-MEV (19) in the wild-type V. anguillarum strain, generating MS801. We repeated this mutagenesis with the tonB1 mutant strain to obtain the tonB1-tonB2 double mutant MS658. We complemented the mutants with a construct harboring the tonB2 operon under the control of the Kmr gene promoter in pACYC177, pMS789. The mutants and complemented mutants were used in bioassays (Table 1). While the tonB1 mutant does not show any changes with respect to the wild type, the tonB1-tonB2 double mutant is impaired in transport of all of the iron sources tested. TonB2, but not TonB1, functions in the transport of anguibactin and enterobactin, while both TonB proteins can operate in the transport of ferrichrome and heme. We also transformed plasmid pMS789, harboring the tonB2 system, into Escherichia coli tonB mutant KP1032, showing that tonB2 from V. anguillarum cannot complement the tonB mutation in KP1032 (Table 1), even though the tonB2 operon of V. anguillarum is expressed in E. coli as determined by reverse transcription (RT)-PCR (data not shown). This was somewhat surprising since the V. cholerae tonB2 gene can complement this E. coli strain and the TonB2 proteins from V. anguillarum and V. cholerae share high homology, as is apparent in the alignment of these two proteins (Fig. 2). Furthermore, as is also shown in Fig. 2, comparison with E. coli TonB does not lead to an obvious answer for the lack of complementation.
We also analyzed the transcription of the two
V. anguillarum tonB clusters by RT-PCR to determine whether the two
tonB genes
are transcribed in an operon with the respective
exbB and
exbD genes. As shown in Fig.
3, a band of the expected size was detected
for all three genes, indicating that each one of the two
tonB systems is indeed transcribed as an operon. Since the Tn
10 mutant
has the same phenotype as
tonB2 mutant MS801, it may be that
the
tolR homologue is also part of the
tonB2 operon and that
the phenotype comes from a polar effect of the transposon on
downstream genes. Therefore we performed an RT-PCR with a primer
in
exbB2 for the RT reaction and a primer set in
tolR for the
PCR. The results in Fig.
3C demonstrate that
tolR is indeed
also part of the
tonB2 operon.
To determine whether expression of the
tonB1 and
tonB2 systems
is regulated by the iron concentration in the cell, we performed
an RNase protection assay (RPA) with labeled riboprobes to detect
either the
tonB1- or the
tonB2-specific mRNAs on total RNA obtained
from cultures grown under iron-rich and iron-limiting conditions.
Figure
4 shows the RPAs for
tonB1 (panel A) and
tonB2 (panel
B). Comparison of lanes 1 (iron rich) and 2 (iron limiting)
demonstrates that both
tonB operons are iron regulated.
The ability of
V. anguillarum to cause infection has been correlated
with the ability to synthesize anguibactin (
2,
6,
8,
20,
21).
We therefore investigated if the transport of anguibactin, mediated
by the TonB2 protein, is essential for virulence. We performed
50% lethal dose (LD
50) experiments with fish, and the results
are listed in Table
2. The
tonB2 mutant is severely attenuated
in virulence, more than 100-fold, while the
tonB1 mutant shows
only a 10-fold decrease in virulence. The
tonB1-
tonB2 double
mutant is twofold more attenuated in virulence than the
tonB2 mutant, possibly because the
tonB2 mutant still has the ability
to take up heme via TonB1. Complementation of the
tonB2 and
tonB1-
tonB2 mutants with the wild-type
tonB2 gene results in
restoration of virulence to a level close to that of the wild
type. Our results demonstrate that a functional
tonB2 system
is essential for ferric-anguibactin transport and virulence
in
V. anguillarum.
Nucleotide sequence accession numbers.
The nucleotide sequences of the
tonB1 and
tonB2 clusters from
V. anguillarum strain 775 have been deposited in the GenBank
sequence library and assigned accession numbers
AJ496544 and
AY644719, respectively.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This work was supported by grants AI19018 and GM64600 from the
National Institutes of Health to J.H.C. and grants AGL2000-0492
and AGL-2003-00086 from the Ministry of Science and Technology
of Spain and grant PGIDT01PXI26202PN from Xunta de Galicia to
M.L.L.
We thank S. Payne, K. Postle, and K. Hughes for providing some of the strains used in this study and G. Winkelmann for purified siderophores.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of Molecular Microbiology and Immunology, Oregon Health & Science University, SW Sam Jackson Pk. Rd., Portland, OR 97239. Phone: (503) 494-7583. Fax: (503) 494-6862. E-mail:
crosajor{at}ohsu.edu.

Editor: J. T. Barbieri

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Infection and Immunity, December 2004, p. 7326-7329, Vol. 72, No. 12
0019-9567/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/IAI.72.12.7326-7329.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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