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Infection and Immunity, May 2004, p. 2710-2722, Vol. 72, No. 5
0019-9567/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/IAI.72.5.2710-2722.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
A Comparative Genome Analysis Identifies Distinct Sorting Pathways in Gram-Positive Bacteria
David Comfort and Robert T. Clubb*
Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Molecular Biology Institute, and the UCLA-DOE Center for Genomics and Proteomics, University of California, Los Angeles, California 90095-1570
Received 15 September 2003/
Returned for modification 25 November 2003/
Accepted 31 January 2004

ABSTRACT
Surface proteins in gram-positive bacteria are frequently required
for virulence, and many are attached to the cell wall by sortase
enzymes. Bacteria frequently encode more than one sortase enzyme
and an even larger number of potential sortase substrates that
possess an LPXTG-type cell wall sorting signal. In order to
elucidate the sorting pathways present in gram-positive bacteria,
we performed a comparative analysis of 72 sequenced microbial
genomes. We show that sortase enzymes can be partitioned into
five distinct subfamilies based upon their primary sequences
and that most of their substrates can be predicted by making
a few conservative assumptions. Most bacteria encode sortases
from two or more subfamilies, which are predicted to function
nonredundantly in sorting proteins to the cell surface. Only

20% of sortase-related proteins are most closely related to
the well-characterized
Staphylococcus aureus SrtA protein, but
nonetheless, these proteins are responsible for anchoring the
majority of surface proteins in gram-positive bacteria. In contrast,
most sortase-like proteins are predicted to play a more specialized
role, with each anchoring far fewer proteins that contain unusual
sequence motifs. The functional sortase-substrate linkage predictions
are available online (
http://www.doe-mbi.ucla.edu/Services/Sortase/)
in a searchable database.

INTRODUCTION
Pathogenic bacteria display an array of surface proteins to
adhere to a site of infection, invade host cells, and evade
the immune response. Many surface proteins are covalently attached
to the cell wall by membrane-associated transpeptidases, called
sortases (reviewed in references
18,
45,
48, and
53). The archetype
sortase is the SrtA protein from
Staphylococcus aureus, which
anchors proteins that contain a C-terminal cell wall sorting
signal (CWS) consisting of an LPXTG motif, followed by a hydrophobic
domain and a tail of mostly positively charged residues (see
Fig.
1A). An N-terminal secretion signal enables the precursor
surface protein to be translocated across the membrane, where
SrtA cleaves it in between the threonine and glycine residues
of the LPXTG motif (
47). SrtA then catalyzes the formation of
an amide link between the carboxyl-group of the threonine and
the cell wall precursor lipid II (
57,
61), which is subsequently
incorporated into the peptidoglycan via the transglycosylation
and transpeptidation reactions of bacterial cell wall synthesis
(
66). An analysis of bacterial genomes indicates that this anchoring
mechanism is conserved in gram-positive bacteria, since nearly
all species encode SrtA homologs and proteins bearing a CWS
(
34,
55). Sortases may be excellent targets for new antimicrobial
agents, since pathogens deficient in these enzymes exhibit reduced
virulence (
11,
12,
23,
35,
43,
46).
A large number of proteins are related to SrtA, but their functions
have yet to be determined (
55). Consistent with playing a role
in surface protein chemistry, all SrtA homologs contain appropriately
positioned active site residues (SrtA residues H120 and C184)
(
32) and transmembrane segments, and their genes are frequently
clustered with genes encoding CWS-containing proteins. Moreover,
several homologs have been shown to be directly involved in
protein anchoring, since their elimination prevents the display
of surface proteins (
11,
23,
26,
54). Although the SrtA protein
recognizes the sequence LPXTG within its substrates, this motif
is widely varied, and a second
S. aureus sortase, called SrtB,
processes proteins bearing the sequence NPQTN (
46). Different
types of sortases may be able to attach proteins to distinct
positions within the cell wall, since recent studies have shown
that the cross-linked protein products of SrtA and SrtB exhibit
distinct electrophoretic mobilities after cell wall digestion
(
44).
Many bacteria encode as many as seven sortases and 40 CWS-containing proteins. The large number of SrtA-related proteins has led to the suggestion that many perform functions other than protein anchoring and has made it difficult to predict the cognate sortase or sortases responsible for displaying many surface proteins. It is also not known whether these enzymes act nonredundantly to selectively sort proteins to the cell surface or whether they have degenerate functions. This is of major importance, because antimicrobial compounds targeted towards a particular sortase could prove ineffective if the enzymes have redundant functions or drug-resistant strains could readily evolve by horizontal gene transfer. We analyzed 72 microbial genomes and were able to conservatively predict the cognate sortase responsible for processing
77% of the CWS-containing proteins. Our results suggest that sortase enzymes nonredundantly sort proteins to the cell surface by selectively recognizing distinct sequence motifs within the CWS.

MATERIALS AND METHODS
Identification of sortase homologs and clustering into families.
The sequences of 241 bacterial genomes, representing 96 species
of bacteria, were searched using PSI-BLAST (
2) for sequence
homologs of SrtA and SrtB from
S. aureus (NCBI BLAST with microbial
genomes:
www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/sutils/genom_table.cgi). In addition,
the genomes of
Streptococcus sobrinus (The Institute for Genomic
Research: tigrblast.tigr.org/ufmg/index.cgi?database=s_sobrinus|seq)
and
Streptomyces avermitilis (National Institute of Technology)
were searched. After four iterations of PSI-BLAST, proteins
that had e-values less than 0.0001 were retained. Each sequence
was inspected to verify that it contained appropriately positioned
catalytic cysteine and histidine residues and an N-terminal
signal peptide (SignalP, version 2.0) (
49,
50). Table
2 lists
the completely sequenced genomes found to encode at least one
sortase-related protein. The homologs were then clustered into
subfamilies using a matrix of BLAST scores describing the relationship
of each homolog with respect to all the other sortases. For
inclusion, each member of a subfamily had to have an expectation
cutoff value of at least 10
20, 30% sequence identity,
and an alignment overlap length of at least 100 amino acids
to every other member of the subfamily. A hidden Markov model
(HMM) was then constructed for each subfamily using HMMER (
20)
to quantify and validate the partitioning and to classify additional
sortase homologs. For inclusion into a subfamily, a sortase
homolog had to have an HMM score of at least 150 with respect
to the subfamily model. The HMM profiles for each subfamily
are provided in the database and can be used with the program
HMMER (
http://hmmer.wustl.edu) to classify sortases.
Identification of sortase substrates.
In order to search for CWS-containing proteins, a database of
protein-coding genes was constructed from the genomic data (
60).
First, 4,700 potential CWS-containing proteins were identified
for the following reasons: (i) they had a suitable signal peptide
sequence within their first 70 amino acids (
49,
50) (SignalP
score, >0.6), (ii) they had a potential transmembrane segment
within 50 amino acids of their C terminus (TMPred) (
28), and
(iii) they had at least one basic residue (arginine or lysine)
within their last eight residues. Each of these proteins was
then examined for the presence of conserved five- to six-amino-acid
motifs immediately preceding the putative transmembrane sequence.
In a second complementary approach, all protein sequences were
searched for the patterns [FILMPSVY][AP]X[ATS][GAKNS] (for LPXTG-like
motifs) and NPX[ST][DGNS] (for SrtB substrates) positioned 17
to 45 residues from the C terminus (
34). Combined these approaches
yielded 892 potential sortase substrates. It should be noted
that a large number of proteins contain sequences related to
LPXTG elsewhere in their primary sequences, and we have elected
to consider only those proteins that possess all of the known
features of a sortase substrate (a cell wall sorting signal
consisting of an LPXTG-like motif, hydrophobic domain, and charged
tail).
Additional CWS-containing proteins were identified in 26 other species. However, the genomes of these organisms have not been completely sequenced and were therefore not used in our analysis. Bacteria with partially sequenced genomes encoding a CWS-containing protein include the following: Actinomyces naeslundii, Actinomyces viscosus, Arcanobacterium pyogenes, Arthrobacter sp., Bacillus sp., Clostridium septicum, Desulfitobacterium hafniense, Erysipelothrix rhusiopathiae, Lactobacillus leichmannii, Lactobacillus paracasei, Lactobacillus reuteri, Listeria grayi, Listeria seeligeri, Peptostreptococcus magnus (Finegoldia magna), Staphylococcus carnosus, Staphylococcus lugdunensis, Staphylococcus saprophyticus, Staphylococcus warneri, Staphylococcus xylosus, Streptococcus constellatus, Streptococcus criceti, Streptococcus downei, Streptococcus dysgalactiae, Streptococcus intermedius, Streptococcus parasanguinis, Streptococcus salivarius, and Streptococcus thermophilus.

RESULTS
Overall strategy.
We analyzed 72 sequenced microbial genomes that contained at
least one sortase homolog in order to functionally link sortase
enzymes to their protein substrates (the CWS-containing proteins
that it presumably anchors to the extracellular surface). First,
we performed a comprehensive search to identify all proteins
that are related to the
S. aureus SrtA and SrtB proteins, as
well as all proteins harboring a CWS. We then clustered the
sortase-like proteins into distinct subfamilies based upon their
primary sequences and systematically analyzed how members of
each subfamily and potential substrates were distributed in
different microbes.
Identification of sortase homologs and clustering into subfamilies.
Sequenced microbial genomes were searched with the program PSI-BLAST using the S. aureus SrtA and SrtB genes as seeds (2). Seventy-two genomes, representing 49 bacterial species (44 gram positive and 5 gram negative), were found to encode a total of 176 sortase homologs that share greater than 21 and 32% sequence identity with the SrtA and SrtB proteins, respectively. Forty-five genomes encode two or more enzymes, with the largest number found in Bacillus cereus (strain ATCC 10987), Streptomyces coelicolor, and Enterococcus faecium, which each encode seven homologs.
The homologs were clustered into subfamilies using a matrix of BLAST scores, and then a HMM was constructed for each subfamily to quantify and validate the partitioning. A HMM is a statistical description of the consensus sequence of each subfamily and enables a rigorous evaluation of the relatedness of a particular homolog to each subfamily. As shown in Table 1, 145 of the 176 homologs can be reliably clustered into six subfamilies (one subfamily of sortases from gram-negative bacteria and five subfamilies from gram-positive bacteria). Following the convention established by Schneewind (42, 46), two of the gram-positive subfamilies are called SrtA and SrtB, since their members have primary sequences that are most closely related to the well-characterized SrtA and SrtB proteins from S. aureus. The remaining gram-positive subfamilies are numbered 3, 4, and 5, whereas the gram-negative subfamily is also known as subfamily 6. As has been previously noted, the members of a subset of SrtA family sortases (20) are distinguished by their genomic proximity to the gene encoding DNA gyrase subunit A (found in the genera Lactococcus and Streptococcus) (37, 54). Table 2 lists how members of each subfamily are distributed in the 49 species of bacteria analyzed in this study. Additional sortases have also been identified in A. naeslundii, A. viscosus (41), Streptococcus oralis, and Streptococcus sanguinis, for which complete genomic information is lacking.
Linking sortase homologs to their substrates: simple predictions.
Two different search protocols detected 892 CWS-containing proteins
encoded in the sequenced genomes that also encoded a sortase
(see Materials and Methods). A large number of substrate-sortase
linkages could readily be made using three distinct methods
(Fig.
1B). First, 27 of the 72 genomes encode only a single
sortase enzyme. These organisms also encode 153 CWS-containing
proteins (17.1% of the total) that can be functionally assigned
to their solitary homolog (called single sortase predictions)
(Table
3). Second, in many organisms a single sortase gene is
positioned next to a gene encoding a CWS-containing protein
(called single cluster predictions). A total of 31 CWS-containing
proteins (3.5% of the total) in 16 organisms can be assigned
using this approach. Finally, functional linkages were made
based upon the well-characterized sorting pathways in
S. aureus,
which encodes two sortases, SrtA- and SrtB-like enzymes, which
anchor proteins bearing the sequence LPXTG or NPQTN, respectively,
within their CWSs (
46). For example, the CWS-containing proteins
in
Listeria innocua and
Listeria monocytogenes can readily be
assigned, because these bacteria also encode only SrtA- and
SrtB-type sortases and putative surface proteins that possess
the appropriate sequence motif. Assuming behavior similar to
that for
S. aureus, the cognate sortase for 257 CWS-containing
proteins can be predicted (28.8% of the total, called SrtA-SrtB
predictions). Combined, these three straightforward approaches
enabled 433 CWS-containing proteins (48.5% of the total) to
be reliably assigned to their cognate sortases (Table
3).
Extended predictions based on sequence homology between substrates.
We reasoned that sortase enzymes that are related to one another
at the primary sequence level would have orthologous functions,
such that they would anchor CWS-containing proteins that were
also conserved at the primary sequence level. We therefore determined
whether any of the remaining unassigned CWS-containing proteins
shared primary sequence homology with a previously assigned
protein (greater than 30% sequence identity). If a match was
found, we checked if the assigned CWS-containing protein was
processed by a sortase enzyme assigned to one of the subfamilies,
and if so, whether the organism encoding the unassigned CWS-containing
protein also encoded a single sortase from the same subfamily.
When this condition was satisfied, a new functional linkage
was made. Using this strategy, 163 new CWS-containing proteins
were linked to their cognate sortases, extending the total number
of predictions to 596 (66.8% of 892). Importantly, this method
cross-validated the initial set of predictions. Specifically,
65, 16, and 173 of the linkages made using the aforementioned
single-sortase, single-cluster, and SrtA-SrtB approaches were
also made by analyzing substrate sequence homology.
Extended predictions based on distinct sequence motifs within the sorting signals.
We analyzed the CWSs of the previously assigned protein substrates (596 CWS-containing proteins) to ascertain whether sortases within a given subfamily processed distinct sorting signals (Fig. 2). As expected, the substrates of the SrtA subfamily contain the LPXTG motif, and SrtB subfamily substrates contain the distinct sequence NPX[TS] (24). Subfamily-5 sortases appear to process the novel sorting signal LAXTG, which is completely conserved in their predicted substrates. Since all of the remaining unassigned LAXTG CWS proteins are also present in genomes that encode a subfamily-5 sortase, an additional 16 functional linkages can be made (Table 3). The subfamily-4 sortases in bacilli are predicted to process CWS-containing proteins with the sequence motif LPXTA[ST]. This is consistent with the finding that the genes encoding subfamily-4 sortases are genomically clustered with genes containing this motif and the finding that LPXTA[ST]-containing proteins are always encoded in genomes with a subfamily-4 sortase. The subfamily-3 sortases are predicted to process a signal similar to that recognized by the SrtA subfamily, but they are distinguished by the prevalence of a glycine residue immediately following the LPXTG motif (in 83.3% of the 54 sorting signals) and by their membrane topology (discussed below). Finally, 37 additional CWS-containing proteins could be tentatively linked to their substrates because their genes were immediately adjacent to a single sortase gene (Table 3).
Unassigned CWS-containing proteins.
The aforementioned approaches predicted the sortase homolog
responsible for processing 77.2% of the CWS-containing proteins.
Functional linkages for the remaining proteins were hindered
because several species encode multiple sortases that are predicted
to have degenerate CWS specificities (for example,
Streptococcus agalactiae,
Streptococcus equi, and
B. cereus encode both subfamily-3
and SrtA-type proteins). In addition, several species contain
unclassifiable sortase homologs whose CWS sequence preference
is not known (
Enterococcus faecalis and
E. faecium).

DISCUSSION
Gram-positive bacteria encode sortase-related proteins that
in
S. aureus and other pathogens anchor virulence determinants
to the cell surface. Because many bacteria encode more than
one sortase-related protein with no known function, we performed
a bioinformatics analysis. First, 176 proteins that are related
to the
S. aureus SrtA and SrtB proteins, as well as 892 potential
protein substrates harboring a CWS, were identified. Using a
combination of methods, the cognate sortase responsible for
processing 77% of the CWS-containing proteins was then predicted.
Based upon their primary sequences, there are five subfamilies
of sortases. These include the SrtA and SrtB subfamilies, which
contain proteins most closely related to the
S. aureus SrtA
and SrtB proteins, respectively, and three previously uncharacterized
groups of related homologs, called subfamilies 3, 4, and 5.
The greatest number of homologs is found in the SrtA subfamily
and subfamily 3, while the remaining subfamilies are of nearly
equal size (Fig.
3A). Interestingly, the majority of bacteria
analyzed in this study contain homologs from at least two of
the five subfamilies, with several containing multiple copies
of sortases from subfamilies 3, 4, and 5 (Table
2). In addition
to their primary sequences, members of each subfamily are distinguished
by their membrane topology, genomic positioning, and specificity
for amino acid sequence motifs within the CWSs of their predicted
substrates. There is no commonly agreed-upon nomenclature for
sortase enzymes. We have therefore provided in the database
a conversion table that lists sortase genes that have been characterized
biochemically and their corresponding name in the database.
The SrtA subfamily.
Several lines of evidence suggest that members of this subfamily
play a housekeeping role in the cell, anchoring a large number
of diverse proteins to the cell wall. First, the majority of
surface proteins (a total of 511) are predicted to be anchored
by SrtA-type sortases (Fig.
3B), which are distributed in a
wide range of bacterial genera (
Bacillus,
Enterococcus,
Lactobacillus,
Lactococcus,
Listeria,
Staphylococcus, and
Streptococcus). Second,
bacteria always encode only a single SrtA-type homolog, which
on average is predicted to anchor a large number of proteins
(

12 substrates per SrtA homolog). Third, a Pfam analysis of
their predicted substrates indicates that they are functionally
diverse (
7). Fourth, genes encoding SrtA-type proteins are never
proximal to genes encoding potential substrates. This is in
contrast with other sortases, whose genes are typically clustered
with a limited number of CWS-bearing substrates and thus appear
to play a more specialized role in the cell. An analysis of
their predicted substrates suggests that SrtA-type sortases
are specific for the sequence LPXTG (Fig.
2). However, our predictions
also suggest that SrtA-type proteins can process proteins in
which the threonine residue is replaced by an alanine, compatible
with results in recent biochemical studies (
59). Assuming that
members of this subfamily behave like the archetypical
S. aureus SrtA protein, their substrates will be anchored to the cell
wall cross-bridge.
Subfamily-3 sortases.
This is the largest subfamily, but its members play a more specialized role, anchoring far fewer proteins than the SrtA-type proteins. Interestingly, the SrtA and subfamily-3 enzymes are predicted to process proteins harboring similar sorting signals (Fig. 2), and many bacterial genomes encode both SrtA and subfamily-3 homologs (Table 2). Do these enzymes serve redundant functions in the cell, or do they differentially process proteins bearing related CWSs? Studies of Streptococcus pyogenes are consistent with the latter, because its SrtA and subfamily-3 homologs have been shown to selectively sort proteins bearing related LPXTG motifs (6). In order to account for this finding, the authors suggested that the SrtA and subfamily-3 enzymes recognized an expanded motif in which an acidic or glycine residue immediately follows the canonical LPXTG motif (6). Our results are generally consistent with this conclusion, since 53% of the predicted SrtA substrates contain the sequence LPXTG[DE], while 83% of the predicted subfamily-3 substrates contain the sequence LPXTGG. The N-terminally located sequence YSIRK has been shown to control the efficiency of export of S. aureus SrtA substrates (5), but it does not appear to be a determinant of specificity for this protein family because it is poorly conserved in the predicted SrtA-type substrates. Intriguingly, two other features of the subfamily-3 proteins may contribute to their substrate specificity. First, the expression of subfamily-3 enzymes and their potential substrates may be coordinately regulated, since their genes are always adjacent to one another. Second, the SrtA and subfamily-3 enzymes appear to be positioned in the membrane differently. Subfamily-3 enzymes contain hydrophobic amino acids at both their N and C termini, suggesting that they are type I membrane proteins (C-terminal end embedded in the membrane). In contrast, SrtA-type proteins contain only an N-terminal stretch of hydrophobic amino acids and are therefore presumably type II membrane proteins (N-terminal end embedded into the membrane). It is conceivable that their distinct membrane topology enables subfamily-3 enzymes to recognize other, as of yet undetermined features of their substrates. Many of the predicted substrates of the subfamily-3 enzymes may be involved in cell adhesion, since they contain domains associated with collagen binding, including the Cna protein B-type, DUF11, and von Willebrand factor type A domains (17, 19, 67).
The SrtB subfamily.
In contrast to the SrtA and subfamily-3 proteins, the remaining subfamilies (SrtB and subfamilies 4 and 5) are expected to process novel sorting signals (Fig. 2). Homologs most closely related to the well-characterized S. aureus SrtB protein (the SrtB subfamily) constitute a minor pathway involved in heme-iron acquisition (46). In addition to S. aureus, a single srtB gene is found in bacteria from the genera Bacillus and Listeria, and in all cases, it is proximal to a single substrate that contains an unusual sequence motif (NPQTN in S. aureus; NPKSS in Listeria; and NPKTG, NPKTD, and NPQTG in Bacillus). All SrtB proteins appear to be involved in iron metabolism, since their prospective substrates contain the NEAT domain, implicated in iron transport (3). Assuming that members of this sortase subfamily behave like the S. aureus SrtB protein, they can be expected to attach proteins to the cell surface (46).
Subfamily-4 sortases.
The subfamily-4 sortases process a unique sorting signal and constitute a specialized sorting pathway found in bacilli. This subfamily is predicted to process proteins bearing the motif LPXTA[ST] (and in B. subtilis a single protein containing the sequence LPDTSA) and is frequently found in bacteria that also contain SrtA, SrtB, and subfamily-3 proteins (Table 2). The unique placement of an alanine at position five in their recognition motif suggests that they operate nonredundantly with these other sortases (Fig. 2). The substrate selectivity of the subfamily-4 enzymes may be further enhanced by coexpression with their substrates, since their genes are typically adjacent to the genes of their predicted substrates. Although many of the predicted subfamily-4 substrates have yet to be annotated, a Pfam analysis reveals that they are predominantly enzymes (5' nucleotidases, glycosyl hydrolase, and subtilase).
Subfamily-5 sortases.
Several high-G+C gram-positive bacteria have replaced SrtA enzymes with subfamily-5 homologs that recognize a nonstandard sorting signal, LAXTG (Fig. 2). Similar to the case with SrtA, it seems likely that the subfamily-5 proteins play a housekeeping role in the cell because their genes are never positioned adjacent to their predicted substrates and SrtA and subfamily-5 proteins are never found in the same organism (Table 2). Biochemical studies have shown that position two in the LPXTG motif is critical for protein sorting (63). The placement of an alanine at this position in the subfamily-5 substrates suggests that in Actinobacteria these enzymes and the subfamily-3 sortases nonredundantly sort proteins to the cell surface. Although the existence of an LAXTG sorting signal in Actinobacteria has been previously noted (55), our comparative genome analysis reveals that this motif is processed by subfamily-5 sortases and it predicts their cognate sortase, even in bacteria that encode more than one enzyme (Corynebacterium diphtheriae, Corynebacterium efficiens, and Bifidobacterium longum). The functions of LAXTG-containing proteins remain to be elucidated, although many appear to bind carbohydrates or to be involved in aerial hyphae formation in Streptomyces (16, 21).
Different protein sorting pathways intersect at sortase-substrate gene clusters.
Sortase genes are frequently clustered with genes encoding potential substrates (Table 4). The majority of the clusters (80%) contain a single sortase homolog and one to three genes encoding a CWS-containing protein. Although most gene clusters pair a sortase with its predicted substrates, several are points at which distinct sorting pathways intersect. These "mixed" gene clusters contain a sortase and its predicted substrates but also genes for an additional substrate(s) that is not processed by the sortase in the cluster. Schneewind and colleagues were the first to identify a mixed gene cluster in S. aureus and Listeria that contains a single srtB gene, a gene for its substrate, and two genes encoding substrates for the distantly located SrtA protein (46). In addition to this well-characterized case, our analysis reveals several other mixed clusters that have yet to be demonstrated experimentally (Table 4). For example, C. diphtheriae and C. efficiens each contain two mixed clusters that pair subfamily-3 sortases with their own substrates and substrates of a distally located subfamily-5 homolog. As in the aforementioned SrtA-SrtB mixed clusters, the ability of the subfamily-3 and -5 enzymes to discriminate between the substrates in the cluster is readily explained by the distinct CWS specificities of these enzymes (Fig. 2). An intriguing mixed cluster has recently been discovered in Streptococcus suis (54) which contains two subfamily-3 genes and three genes encoding CWS-proteins. Consistent with our predictions, one of the substrates in the cluster is attached to the cell surface by a distantly located SrtA-type protein. Interestingly, recent results suggest that the SrtA- and SrtB-type sortases attach proteins to the cell surface but that the extent of branching of these muropeptides is varied (44). The srtA-srtB mixed gene cluster may therefore enable the coordinated placement of distinctly positioned surface proteins to achieve a desired biological outcome, heme iron acquisition in this case. Further evidence that sortases are specific for acceptor groups on the cell wall comes from studies of S. aureus and S. pyogenes. In vitro, the SrtA-type sortases in these bacteria both proteolyze LPSTG peptides, but the S. pyogenes enzyme does not catalyze transpeptidation to NH2-Gly, a mimic of the S. aureus cell wall peptide that is readily used by the S. aureus protein (peptidoglycan cross-links in S. pyogenes are mediated via alanine residues) (61). By extension, the clusters identified in this study suggest that the SrtA and subfamily-3 sortases in S. suis and the subfamily-3 and subfamily-5 sortases in Actinobacteria may operate to place proteins at distinct sites within the cell wall.
Five species of gram-negative bacteria encode a single sortase
homolog and a single CWS-containing substrate:
Colwellia psychrerythraea,
Microbulbifer degradans,
Bradyrhizobium japonicum,
Shewanella oneidensis, and
Shewanella putrefaciens. These sortases are
closely related to one another (Table
1) and are positioned
adjacent to a single CWS-containing substrate bearing the motif
LP[QK]T[AS]T (Fig.
2). The predicted substrates for these enzymes
contain a von Willebrand factor type A domain that is often
associated with ligand binding in eukarya (
17), and they may
be attached to murein lipoproteins (
14,
55). The function of
these substrates is specialized, because other organisms with
completely sequenced genomes from the same subphyla (

-proteobacteria
and

-proteobacteria) do not encode a sortase homolog.
In conclusion, we have shown that the majority of sortase-related proteins in gram-positive bacteria can be partitioned into five distinct subfamilies based upon their primary sequences. Most bacteria encode sortases from two or more of these subfamilies, which are predicted to function nonredundantly in sorting proteins to the cell surface. Approximately 20% of sortase homologs are most closely related to the S. aureus SrtA protein and play a housekeeping role, anchoring a large number of functionally unrelated CWS-containing proteins to the cell surface. In contrast, the majority of sortase homologs have a more specialized role, anchoring on average far fewer proteins that frequently contain unusual sequence motifs in their sorting signals. It has been suggested that many sortase-related proteins perform tasks other than cell wall protein anchoring; however, using only a few conservative assumptions, the majority of sortases are predicted to process CWS-containing proteins. The functional sortase-substrate linkages are completely compatible with all available biochemical data. They are available online (http://www.doe-mbi.ucla.edu/Services/Sortase/) in a searchable database that should prove useful in deciphering the many sorting pathways present in bacteria.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We thank Kevin Connolly, Chu Kong Liew, and Todd O. Yeates for
useful discussions.
This work was supported by a grant from the National Institutes of Health to R.T.C. (AI52217).

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: UCLA-DOE Center for Genomics and Proteomics, University of California, 405 Hilgard Ave., Los Angeles, CA 90095-1570. Phone: (310) 206-2334. Fax: (310) 206-4749. E-mail:
rclubb{at}mbi.ucla.edu.

Editor: V. J. DiRita

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Infection and Immunity, May 2004, p. 2710-2722, Vol. 72, No. 5
0019-9567/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/IAI.72.5.2710-2722.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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