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Infection and Immunity, March 2004, p. 1265-1274, Vol. 72, No. 3
0019-9567/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/IAI.72.3.1265-1274.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Birgit Strommenger,1,
Ralph Goethe,1 Karen Dohmann,1 Gerald-F. Gerlach,1* Karen Stevenson,2 Ling-ling Li,3 Qing Zhang,3 Vivek Kapur,3 and Tim J. Bull4
Institute for Microbiology, Department of Infectious Diseases, School of Veterinary Medicine, Hannover, Germany,1 Moredun Research Institute, International Research Centre, Penicuik, Scotland,2 Department of Surgery, St. George's Hospital Medical School, London, United Kingdom,4 Department of Microbiology and Biomedical Genomics Center, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota3
Received 12 June 2003/ Returned for modification 4 September 2003/ Accepted 13 November 2003
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Previous attempts to determine the molecular cause for pathogenicity of M. avium subsp. paratuberculosis have focused on the identification of antigenic proteins (16, 26) and the characterization of secreted components by using monoclonal antibodies (32). Further studies have identified an M. avium subsp. paratuberculosis-specific low-GC cassette carrying genes with putative functions related to lipopolysaccharide or extracellular polysaccharide biosynthesis (47) and have identified cross-reactive, species- and subspecies-specific epitopes (32). In addition, an M. avium subsp. paratuberculosis-specific ferric reductase which is secreted in vivo and in vitro has been described (25). Other potential virulence factors reported include a serine protease (10) and a fibronectin attachment protein (41). However, closely related homologues of these factors can be found in M. avium subsp. avium and Mycobacterium tuberculosis, and they are unlikely to be M. avium subsp. paratuberculosis specific.
In this study we have investigated the hypothesis that, as has been shown in other bacterial species, unique membrane proteins and secretory pathways are likely to be critical features involved in M. avium subsp. paratuberculosis pathogenicity (7, 17, 18, 20). We have used representational difference analysis (RDA) (30, 45, 47) to identify a 7-kb M. avium subsp. paratuberculosis-specific ABC transporter operon (mpt). Proteins from this operon were shown to contain putative membrane-spanning regions and to be expressed on the mycobacterial cell surface in vitro and in vivo. We further show that this ABC transporter operon is preceded by two putative Fur boxes and represents part of an M. avium subsp. paratuberculosis-specific 38-kb putative pathogenicity island that includes several iron uptake-related gene clusters.
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TABLE 1. Characteristics of strains, phages, plasmids, and primers used in this study
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Manipulation and analysis of DNA. Agarose gel electrophoresis, Southern blot analyses, plasmid preparation, PCR, DNA cloning, and transformation of E. coli were done by standard procedures (37). DNA-modifying enzymes were purchased from New England Biolabs (Karlsruhe, Germany). DNA sequencing was done by primer walking; primers were purchased from Invitrogen (Groningen, The Netherlands), and sequencing reactions were done by SeqLab (Göttingen, Germany). Sequencing data analyses were performed with the HUSAR 5.0 program (DKFZ, Heidelberg, Germany). Preliminary sequence data were obtained from the Institute for Genomic Research website at http://www.tigr.org. BLASTN and BLASTP engines were used through the National Center for Biotechnology Information portal (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/BLAST). The M. avium subsp. paratuberculosis genome was searched by using Contig16, available from the University of Minnesota portal (http://www.ccgb.umn.edu/cgi-bin/common/web_blast.cgi).
Construction of recombinant mycobacterial shuttle plasmids and deletion derivatives and transformation in M. smegmatis mc2155.
The 5,367-bp SacI fragment RDIII300 (Fig. 1), containing the complete mptC, mptD, and mptE open reading frames (ORFs) and truncated mptB and mptF ORFs, was cloned into the mycobacterial shuttle vector pMV361 (Table 1) under control of the vector-based hsp60 promoter. Based on this plasmid, designated pRDIII320, deletion derivatives were generated. Deletion of a 3,201-bp FseI fragment resulted in plasmid pRDIII320
1 (Fig. 1), containing mptE and a partial mptF gene. Deletion of the DNA downstream of an SmaI restriction site by using a double digestion with SmaI and HpaI resulted in plasmid pRDIII320
2 (Fig. 1), containing an intact mptC ORF. These plasmids were used to transform M. smegmatis mc2155 by electroporation as described previously (38).
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FIG. 1. Representation of ORFs and putative Fur boxes from the M. avium subsp. paratuberculosis 38-kb locus and identity of homologues in other bacteria. The inset shows the relative locations of the mpt ORFs with respect to the deletion derivatives constructed. Numbers in parentheses represent the percent identities of homologues to putative M. avium subsp. paratuberculosis ORFs.
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Preparation of antiserum. A DNA fragment obtained by PCR with primers ABC3 and ABC4 (Table 1) was cut with BamHI and EcoRI and cloned into pGEX5x-3, resulting in plasmid pRDIII350 (Table 1). Upon induction with isopropyl-thiogalactoside (IPTG) (1 mM final concentration), inclusion bodies were formed and purified as described previously (19). Serum was raised in rabbits by an initial intracutaneous injection and two subcutaneous booster injections 3 and 6 weeks later, each with 100 µg of recombinant fusion protein in a total volume of 300 µl containing 30% adjuvant (Emulsigen-Plus; MVP Inc.).
Isolation and labeling of phages recognizing surface-exposed epitopes of an Mpt protein. Biopanning was performed based on the Ph.D.-12 phage display library (New England Biolabs), containing random 12-mer peptides with a complexity of 1.9 x 109. Phages were panned by using whole cells or cell envelopes coupled to cyanogen bromide-activated Sepharose of M. smegmatis transformants carrying pRDIII320. After amplification in E. coli, counterselection to remove nonspecific phages was done by absorption to whole cells or cell envelopes of M. smegmatis carrying the vector pMV361 only. This selective panning with counterselection was repeated five times with high-stringency washing conditions in the last panning, as described previously (44). Both panning procedures resulted in the selection of the same phage, designated fMptD. Fluorescence labeling of phage particles was performed as previously described (44).
Enrichment of M. avium subsp. paratuberculosis from bulk milk. Peptide aMptD (GKNHHHQHHRPQ) was synthesized based on the sequence obtained from phage fMptD with amino-terminal biotinylation and amino-hexacarbonic acid as a spacer (Fa. Affina Immuntech, Berlin, Germany). The peptide was dissolved, coupled to paramagnetic particles (Promega Inc., Madison, Wis.), and used for peptide-mediated capture PCR on bulk milk from herds previously analyzed by this method with a different peptide (44). The specificity of the amplification product was confirmed by restriction enzyme digestion (data not shown).
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A genomic alignment of the completed M. avium subsp. avium (TIGR-104) genome and the recently completed M. avium subsp. paratuberculosis (K-10) genome revealed that the RDIII30 sequence is part of a 38-kb M. avium subsp. paratuberculosis-specific locus (GenBank accession number AE016958, located at coordinates 4146188 through 4184947 of the M. avium subsp. paratuberculosis K-10 genome) comprising 22 ORFs orientated into three major gene clusters, provisionally designated fep, mpt, and sid (Fig. 1). The locus is bounded on one side by an insertion element with 83% homology to IS1110 (23) that is present as a single copy in M. avium subsp. paratuberculosis and in some strains of M. avium subsp. avium but not in the genome of the sequenced M. avium subsp. avium (TIGR-104) strain. The other side of the 38-kb locus contains sequence with 95% DNA homology over 23 kb to M. avium subsp. avium (TIGR-104), with the 38-kb locus starting from CGGCCCGGCGAG positioned in the M. avium genome at coordinate 5012818.
In this work the 38-kb locus was numbered for clarity as positions 1 to 38760 (the sequence with accession number AF419325 is located at position 6600 to 15344). A BLASTN search of the whole 38-kb locus sequence against GenBank confirmed the unique specificity of this region, which also includes the previously identified M. avium subsp. paratuberculosis-specific probe Mptb61.32 (43), located at positions 36208 to 36803 (Fig. 1).
Functional genomics of the mpt operon and the 38-kb locus. The lack of homology of the carboxy-terminal region of MptA to the GenBank protein database and the close homology of the amino-terminal region of MptA and carboxy-terminal region of MptB to the products of genes rv1348 of M. tuberculosis and sc4c2.24 of Streptomyces coelicolor (Table 2) suggest that both ORFs may combine to encode a single MptA-MptB protein. The ORFs of mptA and mptB overlap by 62 bp and contain a previously identified "slippery site" (CCC CCA at positions 13599 to 13604) (43) associated with programmed translational frameshifts. A similar frameshift resulting in the expression of a single transporter protein has been previously described for a permease protein belonging to an ABC transporter operon in M. smegmatis (2). We propose, therefore, that the putative start codon for MptA-MptB is at position 14040, encoding the carboxy-terminal region of ORF mptA only (Fig. 1) and, together with mptB, encoding an ORF of 589 amino acids in length. This start codon is supported by an associated Shine-Dalgarno consensus sequence (GAAGGA) and two putative transcriptional Fur box control motifs (38-kb locus positions 14079 to 14105 and 14504 to 14531) within putative bidirectional promoters upstream of this position. Both Fur boxes have significant homology (90 and 74%) (Fig. 2) to an E. coli Fur box consensus sequence (1), and Fur box 2 also has a perfect panlindromic structure.
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TABLE 2. BLAST search results
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FIG. 2. Alignment of M. avium subsp. paratuberculosis 38-kb region putative Fur boxes with an E. coli consensus sequence and Fur boxes from several other pathogens. Dots indicate identical nucleotides, and numbers in parentheses indicate the base location.
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Unlike other ORFs in the 38-kb region, mptD to -F do not have functional homologues in Yersinia spp. or S. coelicolor. Even though the mptC reading frame overlaps mptD, ORFs mptD to -F are more linked by their significant protein identities (22 to 34%) and similar genomic organization to a cobalt ABC transporter cassette found in the gut commensal Bifidobacterium longum (39). MptE contains a CbiQ functional motif (E value, 2E-13) and MptF contains a CbiO functional motif (E value, 3E-39), which are associated with active transport of cobalt into the cytosol. MptD has no predicted functional motifs, but TMHMM (algorithm for the prediction of transmembrane helices in proteins, accessible with the HUSAR 5.0 program [DKFZ, Heidelberg, Germany]) predictions indicate six transmembrane domains (data not shown), suggesting that MptD is a membrane-bound component in this system.
The mpt genes are positioned between the sid and fep clusters. The sid cluster is the largest of the putative operons and includes the genes sidA to sidG and possibly a gene encoding a membrane signaling protein (ppe2). These genes are contiguous but are orientated in groups transcribed in opposing directions enclosing a Fur box located at positions 18571 to 18597 (Fig. 2) between sidG and sidA. The ORFs sidB and sidC1, sidC2 and sidD, and sidE and sidF are orientated in tandem with overlapping start and stop codons. Eleven of 12 predicted genes from these clusters have significant identities (24 to 42%) and are arranged in an organization similar to that of operons involved in the nonribosomal synthesis and membrane transport of Fe3+-associated heterocyclic siderophore peptides from Y. pestis (3), Yersinia enterocolitica (11), and S. coelicolor (4). The sid cluster is followed by a putative nitrile hydratase homologue (cobW) at the end of the 38-kb island and is flanked by an IS1110-like insertion sequence. The fep cluster is a cluster of six ORFs, with four ORFs overlapping. The first ORF encodes a homologue (46% identity) of the ppe gene family in M. tuberculosis and is a probable membrane protein involved in signaling. Adjacent to this are three overlapping ORFs, fepB to fepD (Fig. 1), with significant identity (25 to 36%) and similar organization to genes in Y. pestis and S. coelicolor that are involved in the transport of catecholate Fe3+-associated siderophore into the bacterial cytosol (40). Homologues of fepC and fepD are ABC transporters associated with the ability of catecholate siderophores to permeate through bacterial membranes. The putative FepC protein has an ATP binding motif signature (E value, 1E-38) suggesting that it is an active transport system. Homologues to FepB, such as YiuA of Y. pestis, are periplasmic substrate binding proteins associated with the transport of Fe3+ siderophores. The final two ORFs have significant functional motifs but have only minor connections with other fep systems. The first, tauD, overlapping fepB, has 32 to 37% identity to taurine deoxygenases of S. coelicolor, Y. pestis, and Pseudomonas aeruginosa. The second, tehB, contains a tellurite resistance motif (parse 6E-06) with significant homology to S-adenosyl-L-methionine-dependent non-nucleic acid methyltransferases of S. coelicolor (Table 2).
Expression of Mpt proteins and their potential role in virulence. The predicted expression and localization of MptC and MptD in cell membranes were investigated by various methods. For MptC, Western blotting was performed with a serum raised in rabbits against a glutathione S-transferase-MptC fusion protein. No MptC protein was expressed by E. coli transformants (data not shown); however, a 64-kDa protein, consistent with the predicted size of MptC, could be demonstrated in envelope preparations of M. avium subsp. paratuberculosis and M. smegmatis transformed with MptC expression constructs, but not in controls (Fig. 3).
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FIG. 3. Coomassie blue-stained gel (top) and Western blot (bottom) of crude membrane preparations. (A) Lanes 1 to 4, M. smegmatis mc2155 transformants containing pMV361, pRDIII320, pRDIII320 2, and pRDIII320 1, respectively. (B) M. smegmatis (lane 1) and M. avium subsp. paratuberculosis (lane 2). The arrows indicate the position of the MptC protein detected by the serum raised against the recombinant fusion protein. The numbers on the left indicate the positions of protein markers in kilodaltons.
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2) or MptE-F (pRDIII320
1). In addition, FITC-labeled fMptD could detect M. avium subsp. paratuberculosis, but not M. avium subsp. avium, grown in Middlebrook 7H9 medium (Fig. 4B). These results strongly suggest that phage fMptD binds an epitope of a specific M. avium subsp. paratuberculosis protein, MptD, which is expressed and exposed on the cell surface.
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FIG. 4. Fluorescence microscopy with FITC-labeled phage fMptD as an affinity reagent. (A) M. smegmatis mc2155 transformed with pRDIII320 (top panels) and pMV361 (bottom panels) observed by light microscopy (left panels) and immunofluorescence (right panels). (B) M. avium subsp. paratuberculosis (top panels) or M. avium subsp. avium (bottom panels) observed by light microscopy (left panels) and immunofluorescence (right panels).
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FIG. 5. Peptide aMptD-mediated capture PCR from M. avium subsp. paratuberculosis-negative (panels 1 and 2) and -positive (panels 3 and 4) bulk milk samples with ISMav2-derived primers. Lanes a and b, products of PCRs of the sample; lanes c, internal positive control (sample spiked with M. avium subsp. paratuberculosis DNA). The arrow indicates the expected position of the PCR product in base pairs.
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Homologues to proteins encoded by the sid operon are involved in the nonribosomal synthesis and membrane transport of Fe3+-associated heterocyclic siderophore peptides from Y. pestis (3), Y. enterocolitica (11), and S. coelicolor (4). In these organisms, the operons are transcriptionally controlled by binding of proteins, such as the furB gene product, onto Fur box motifs positioned within associated promoters. fur genes have also been identified in several mycobacterial species; a role of furA in virulence has been postulated, as it modulates the response to oxidative stress by regulating the expression of the catalase:peroxidase. To date, nothing is known about the function of furB, which likewise is present in several mycobacterial species (36). The sid operon described in this work contains a 19-mer Fur box homologue with four mismatches to an E. coli consensus sequence (1) within a putative bidirectional promoter sequence. This suggests that the sid operon may have biosynthetic and transcriptional control mechanisms similar to the those of the ybt operon of Yersinia spp.
Homologues of proteins encoded by the fep operon (FepC and -D) in Y. pestis and S. coelicolor are ABC transporters associated with the ability of catecholate Fe3+ siderophores to permeate through bacterial membranes into the cytosol (40). The putative FepC protein has an ATP binding motif signature, suggesting that this is part of an active transport system. Homologues to the FepB protein, such as YiuA of Y. pestis, are periplasmic binding proteins also associated with the transport of Fe3+ siderophores. The TauD homologues are taurine deoxygenases which liberate sulfur from taurine for assimilation into processes such as cysteine biosynthesis (27) and may be crucial virulence determinants in intracellular persistence when access to sulfonated compounds is limited. The sequence divergence of the predicted M. avium subsp. paratuberculosis TauD protein suggests that it may have a different specific substrate that could possibly be a catechol siderophore. The putative TehB protein has significant homology to S-adenosyl-L-methionine-dependent non-nucleic acid methyltransferases whose function could be related to the catechol-o-methyltransferase activity on catechol siderophores observed with gene Rv1703c from M. tuberculosis (14).
The final ORF in the 38-kb locus, cobW, is located at the very end of the locus between the sidA-F cluster and IS1110. Its product contains a CobW motif and significant identity with Rv0106 of M. tuberculosis and with SCF9.33c of S. coelicolor. The function of this gene is uncertain, but the presence of a CobW motif suggests that it may be an activator of nitrile hydratase, an enzyme important in production of nitric oxide and whose biosynthesis is linked to Fe3+ regulation in macrophages (15).
We have investigated the expression and location of two proteins from the mpt operon, which support our in silico analyses. We have demonstrated the expression of MptC in M. smegmatis transformants, confirmed its predicted size, and shown it to be an envelope-associated protein. The expression of MptC in cell envelopes of M. avium subsp. paratuberculosis was also shown, supporting its putative function as an ABC transporter (18). In addition, an M. avium subsp. paratuberculosis-specific phage (fMptD) was isolated and used to demonstrate the expression of MptD in M. smegmatis transformants and on the surface of M. avium subsp. paratuberculosis. This finding supports the hypothesis that this protein might form a selective pore associated with the outer membrane-like layer of the mycobacterial cell envelope. Furthermore, we developed and used a cell capture PCR technique that employs an fMptD-derived peptide with specific binding capacity for MptD to capture and identify M. avium subsp. paratuberculosis in raw milk from infected cattle. This demonstrated that the MptD protein is exposed on the surface of M. avium subsp. paratuberculosis during infection and is therefore a potential target for M. avium subsp. paratuberculosis immunization or treatment.
These results together with the predicted functions of other genes in the 38-kb region strongly suggest its association with M. avium subsp. paratuberculosis virulence and that the 38-kb locus should be considered the first pathogenicity island identified in M. avium subsp. paratuberculosis. The localization of an ABC transporter operon on a putative pathogenicity island has been previously described for Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium (48), and an ABC transporter also involved in iron uptake has been identified on a pathogenicity island of Streptococcus pneumoniae (7). Furthermore, the ABC transporter system of Y. pestis, YbtPQ, which also is required for iron uptake and has a significant degree of similarity to the mpt operon products of M. avium subsp. paratuberculosis, is located within a large unstable region of the Y. pestis chromosome (18).
Future studies are needed to determine the precise function of the M. avium subsp. paratuberculosis-specific fep, mpt, and sid operons. The use of specific phage-displayed peptides might be of considerable value in this field by overcoming the problems associated with the extremely slow growth of this organism and the lack of a proven targeted mutagenesis system for M. avium subsp. paratuberculosis.
The induction of protective immunity against systemic S. pneumoniae infection in mice when they are vaccinated with components of iron uptake ABC transporters (8) and the sustained reduction of challenged M. tuberculosis growth when mice are vaccinated with a phosphate ABC transporter (46) suggest that the MptD protein may be a suitable component in an M. avium subsp. paratuberculosis vaccine design. The recent development of a beige/scid mouse model able to demonstrate intestinal pathophysiologic changes upon M. avium subsp. paratuberculosis infection (33) may support such studies.
J.S. and B.S. contributed equally to this work. ![]()
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