Previous Article | Next Article ![]()
Infection and Immunity, September 2004, p. 5159-5167, Vol. 72, No. 9
0019-9567/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/IAI.72.9.5159-5167.2004
Copyright © 2004, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Center of Marine Biotechnology, University of Maryland Biotechnology Institute, Baltimore, Maryland
Received 4 May 2004/ Returned for modification 10 June 2004/ Accepted 22 June 2004
|
|
|---|
|
|
|---|
In developing and maintaining a UTI, P. mirabilis competes against the primary bladder defenses, which include physical barriers, such as bulk flow of urine, which rinses away nonattached or weakly attached microbes, as well as low pH and high concentration of salts, urea, and organic acids. If the bacteria bypass these defenses, a second line of host response, innate host defense, becomes involved. Innate immunity refers to antigen-nonspecific defense mechanisms that a host uses immediately or within several hours after exposure to an antigen. It includes the physical barriers, as well as an immune response that involves (among many others) the production of antimicrobial peptides.
There are about 500 known antimicrobial peptides (29), and at least two of them, human ß-defensin 1 (hBD1) and hBD2, are active in the human urinary tract (5, 9). These two peptides are both members of the defensins, which is a family of 3- to 5-kDa, three-disulfide, cationic, ß-sheet antimicrobial peptides that engage in host defense by directly killing microbes due to their ability to disrupt microbial membranes (10, 16). ß-Defensins have up to 45 residues, a unique cysteine pairing (C1-C5, C2-C4, and C3-C6), and several lysines and arginines (16). Within the kidney, hBD1 is produced in the distal tubules, the loops of Henle, and the collecting ducts. Human urine contains 10 to 100 µg of hBD1 per liter, and the release of hBD1 rises about threefold during pyelonephritis (26). These innate immune response antimicrobial peptides offer the host an immediate, although nonspecific, defense against invading bacteria. They act in concert with specific host defenses in the form of the humoral-response-mediated immunoglobulins (Igs), IgA and IgG, which are time dependent in their formation (19).
P. mirabilis has multiple mechanisms to evade host defenses, including the extracellular metalloprotease ZapA (27, 28), also referred to as an IgA protease (24, 25). ZapA is expressed in many strains of P. mirabilis (24). ZapA expression is coordinately regulated with swarmer cell differentiation and swarming behavior (27), with ca. 30 times more zapA transcript expressed in swarmer cells than in uninduced swimmer cells. ZapA has been purified as a single 54-kDa protein, and the genes encoding the enzyme have been cloned (28). Based on its deduced amino acid sequence, ZapA is a member of the serralysin metalloprotease family of zinc metalloproteases, which require both zinc and divalent cations for maximal catalysis (6, 11, 12).
Data from murine UTI experiments have demonstrated that, in the absence of ZapA, bacterial survival in the urinary tract is dramatically decreased; e.g., the rates of recovery of ZapA P. mirabilis from the urine and bladder differ by at least 104 per ml and 103 per g, respectively, compared to the recovery of wild-type P. mirabilis from those same sites (27). This decrease is as great or greater than those for other P. mirabilis virulence factors (13), emphasizing the importance of ZapA as a virulence factor in P. mirabilis UTI. The dramatic attenuation of virulence in strains lacking ZapA suggests that ZapA may have a broad spectrum of activity associated with virulence. One hypothesis to explain the dramatic attenuation of virulence suggests that the role of ZapA in UTI extends beyond cleavage of IgA and IgG and that the principal substrates of ZapA may be other proteins found in the urinary tract.
In the present report, data are presented to show that ZapA hydrolyzes a wide range of protein and peptide substrates, including the antimicrobial peptides hBD1 and LL-37.
|
|
|---|
Proteins, peptides, and chemicals. All chemicals were of the highest available purity. Protein substrates were purchased from Calbiochem (bovine serum albumin [BSA], human IgA1, IgA2, secretory IgA, and IgG), Quidel Corp. (C1q and C3), or Boehringer-Mannheim (actin, ß-tubulin, collagen [type I], fibronectin, and laminin). Dynorphin A, dynorphin A fragment 1-7, and bradykinin were obtained from Bachem. hBD1 and hBD2 were obtained either as gifts from Wuyuan Lu (Institute of Human Virology, University of Maryland Biotechnology Institute) or were commercially purchased from the Peptide Institute, Inc. LL-37 was a gift from John S. Gunn (Ohio State University) or was purchased from Phoenix Pharmaceuticals, Inc. Protegrin PG-1 was a gift from John S. Gunn.
Purification of ZapA. The ZapA protease was purified by phenyl-Sepharose hydrophobic interaction chromatography using a modification (28) of the method originally described by Loomes et al. (17). Briefly, P. mirabilis was incubated overnight at 37°C in 1-liter cultures of LB broth. Cells and debris were removed by centrifugation at 10,000 x g for 30 min at 4°C. The protease-containing supernatants were then filtered through 0.45-mm-pore-size filters (Micron Separations Inc.), and the filtrates were loaded at a rate of 1 ml/min at 4°C onto columns (2.5 by 50 cm; total bed volume, 240 ml) of phenyl-Sepharose (Pharmacia) equilibrated in 50 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.0). The columns were washed with 10 column volumes of 50 mM Tris-HCl buffer (pH 8.0) or until unbound material was removed. Bound protease was eluted with 50 mM Tris buffer (pH 11). The pH of the fractions containing the ZapA protease was adjusted to 8.0 with HCl after collection, and the fractions were pooled. The purified protease eluted from this column was then dialyzed against 50 mM Tris (pH 8.0) and stored at 20°C in 20% glycerol until further use. The purity of the ZapA was determined by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE), as described by Wassif et al. (28), and averaged 98 to 99%.
Protein analyses. Protein concentration was determined with the micro-bicinchoninic acid protein assay reagent as recommended by the manufacturer (Pierce Chemical Co.).
Proteolysis of protein substrates. Proteolysis of protein and peptide substrates by ZapA was done with 20 nM ZapA and 1 to 125 µM substrate in a buffer consisting of 50 mM MES (morpholineethanesulfonic acid), 10 mM NaCl, 2 mM CaCl2 and 0.5 µM ZnCl2, pH 6.0, at 37°C for 1 to 16 h, depending on the substrate used. For example, proteolysis of antimicrobial peptides was measured with 100 ng of ZapA and 50 µg of the respective peptide in a reaction volume of 100 µl. Reactions were stopped by addition of EDTA to a final concentration of 20 mM, as described by Wassif et al. (28). To study the effects of denaturation of the protein substrate on hydrolysis by ZapA, a protein substrate was either incubated at 85°C or incubated in 8 M urea for 15 min prior to exposure to the enzyme. Protein substrates in 8 M urea were diluted with buffer to 0.5 M urea, a concentration of urea that does not affect ZapA hydrolysis (data not shown).
Detection of protein substrate hydrolysis. Proteolysis of protein and peptide substrates by purified ZapA was measured by two methods: SDS-PAGE and high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). SDS-PAGE was done using commercial premade 4 to 20% gradient gels (Ready Gels; Bio-Rad, Hercules, Calif.) and the system established by Laemmli (14). After electrophoresis, protein bands were stained with SYPRO Orange (Molecular Probes) according to the manufacturer's recommendation and the protein band patterns were analyzed with a Typhoon 9410 variable-mode imager (Amersham Biosciences). The loss of the substrate band or the presence of new digestion product bands after incubation with ZapA indicated that the enzyme hydrolyzed the protein.
In HPLC analyses, ZapA hydrolysis of protein and peptide substrates was assessed by measuring the peptide fragments resulting from the cleavage of the substrate with a Zorbax 300 SB-C8 rapid-resolution column (4.6 by 50 mm; 3.5-µm matrix; Agilent). To separate these small peptides, a gradient starting at 3% acetonitrile (ACN) in 0.1% trifluoroacetic acid (TFA) and progressing over 20 min to 64% ACN plus 0.8% isopropanol in 0.07% TFA was used and the separation was run at 50°C. Peptides were detected with a diode array detector at 214 nm, and the chromatograms were analyzed for peak height and area with ChemStation software (Agilent).
MALDI-TOF spectrometry.
hBD1, hBD2, LL-37, and protegrin were incubated in the presence of ZapA, and the reaction was stopped by the addition of a saturating amount of EDTA, as described earlier. This material (20 ng) was cocrystallized in
-cyano-4-hydroxycinnamic acid (10 mg/ml in 50% ACN-0.3% TFA) and analyzed by matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization-time of flight (MALDI-TOF) spectrometry on a Voyager DE STR (Applied Biosystems, Foster City, Calif.) using Data Explorer (version 4.0). Data were acquired in linear mode, and masses were externally calibrated with a standard peptide mixture. Peptide fragments were predicted from MALDI-TOF masses with PROWL World Wide Web software (http://prowl.rockefeller.edu/).
Measurement of antibacterial activity. Inactivation of the antimicrobial activity of hBD1 and LL-37 by ZapA hydrolysis was measured by a MIC assay based on the NCCLS guidelines (20) and modified as follows. E. coli D31 was incubated overnight in Mueller-Hinton broth (Difco) at 37°C and then diluted 100-fold in fresh broth and incubated at 37°C until the culture density reached an optical density at 600 nm of 0.2. The culture was then diluted 200-fold in 10 mM NaPO4 buffer, pH 7.4. The cells were pipetted into the wells of a 96-well microtiter dish (Costar; 3790) to which was added either (i) buffer, (ii) a dilution series of the antimicrobial peptide, or (iii) a dilution series of the antimicrobial peptide that had been incubated in the presence of ZapA (as described for proteolysis of protein substrates). E. coli D31 cells in buffer plus ZapA served as a control. Each well contained 5 x 104 CFU in 100 µl of fluid. The cells were incubated at 37°C for 2 h, after which an aliquot was diluted and the CFU were determined by spreading the inoculum on Mueller-Hinton agar and incubating it overnight at 37°C. The percentage of cells killed was determined from the mean of a triplicate series of CFU data by using the equation percent killing = (CFUcontrol CFUdiluted peptide)/CFUcontrolx 100, where the control is 0 µg of antimicrobial peptide per ml.
|
|
|---|
![]() View larger version (87K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 1. Qualitative measurement of the degradation of proteins associated with urinary tract epithelial cells by ZapA. A qualitative assessment of protein degradation by ZapA was made by an SDS-PAGE assay in which protein substrates by themselves and in the presence of ZapA (plus signs) were compared. The loss of a given protein band when reacted with the protease indicates that the protein is a substrate of ZapA. (A) IgA1, IgA2, and IgG. (B) Actin, tubulin, and fibronectin. (C) Collagen and laminin. (D) BSA (a negative control), IgA, C1q, and C3. All reaction mixtures were incubated at 37°C for 8 h in a reaction volume of 100 µl containing 20 nM ZapA and 100 to 125 µM respective protein substrate. Stds, standards.
|
![]() View larger version (30K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 2. Quantitative measurement of ZapA proteolysis of IgA and IgG by HPLC analysis. In this method, the decrease in the substrate protein peak (rightmost peak in each chromatogram; retention time of ca. 12 min) area and increases in the number and peak areas of product peaks (generally in the range of 2- to 10-min retention time) were used to assess proteolysis as a function of time of incubation and preincubation denaturation of the substrate. (A) Digestion of native IgA over time. The cascade of chromatograms from front to back is IgA without ZapA and in the presence of ZapA at 0, 0.5, 1, 2, 4, 6, and 16 h. (B) Digestion of IgA preincubated in 8 M urea. From front to back, the chromatograms are IgA without ZapA and in the presence of ZapA at 0, 0.5, 1, 2, 4, 6, and 16 h. (C) Digestion of heat-denatured IgA (preincubated at 85°C for 15 min). From front to back, the chromatograms are IgA without ZapA and in the presence of ZapA at 0, 0.5, 1, 2, 4, 6, and 16 h. (D) Digestion of IgG. From front to back, the chromatograms are IgG without ZapA (0 h), IgG plus ZapA (0 h) at 16 h and 37°C, heat-denatured IgG without ZapA, heat-denatured IgG with ZapA, urea-denatured IgG without ZapA, and urea-denatured IgG with ZapA. Reaction mixtures were incubated at 37°C for the specified times in a reaction volume of 100 µl containing 20 nM ZapA and 100 to 125 µM respective protein substrate.
|
![]() View larger version (22K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 3. HPLC chromatograms of the digestion of hBD1 by ZapA. Shown is cleavage of hBD1, part of the kidney innate defense mechanism, by the ZapA protease over time. Chromatograms are, in order from front to back, hBD1 at 0 h; hBD1 at 16 h of incubation; and hBD1 plus ZapA at 0, 1, 2, 4, 6, and 16 h of incubation. The reaction mixtures were incubated at 37°C for the specified times in a reaction volume of 100 µl containing 20 nM ZapA and 125 µM (50 µg) hBD1.
|
![]() View larger version (21K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 4. ZapA proteolysis of antimicrobial peptides. Shown are HPLC chromatograms of the digestion of hBD1 (A), hBD2 (B), human LL-37 (C), and porcine protegrin (D). In each panel the foremost chromatogram represents a reaction of the antimicrobial peptide without ZapA, while the rearmost chromatogram is the same substrate in the presence of the protease. In each, 20 nM ZapA and 125 µM respective antimicrobial peptide were incubated for 8 h at 37°C.
|
Location of the scissile bonds in hBD1 and LL-37. The location of the enzyme cleavage sites on the antimicrobial peptide and the identity of the resulting peptide fragments generated upon ZapA proteolysis of hBD1 and LL-37 were determined by MALDI-TOF spectrometry. Nine fragments were detected as significantly above the baseline in the digest of hBD1 (Fig. 5). The masses of six of these fragments corresponded to one or more peptide sequences within the hBD1 sequence (Table 1). The location of these fragments within the hBD1 amino acid sequence is shown in Fig. 5.
![]() View larger version (19K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 5. MALDI-TOF analysis of the cleavage of hBD1 by ZapA. (A) hBD1 alone. (B) hBD1 peptide fragments after incubation with ZapA under standard conditions (Materials and Methods). Arrows under the sequence of hBD1, potential sites of cleavage and peptide fragments deduced from the MALDI-TOF mass data.
|
|
View this table: [in a new window] |
TABLE 1. Predicted peptide fragments resulting from ZapA proteolysis of hBD1
|
![]() View larger version (18K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 6. MALDI-TOF analysis of the cleavage of LL-37 by ZapA. (A) LL-37 alone. (B) LL-37 peptide fragments after incubation with ZapA. Arrows under the sequence of LL-37, potential sites of cleavage and peptide fragments deduced from the MALDI-TOF mass data.
|
|
View this table: [in a new window] |
TABLE 2. Predicted peptide fragments resulting from ZapA proteolysis of LL-37
|
![]() View larger version (17K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 7. ZapA proteolysis of hBD1 and LL-37 reduces the antimicrobial activity of hBD1 and LL-37. The antimicrobial activity of each peptide was determined with E. coli D31, as described in Materials and Methods. (A) Antimicrobial activity, as LD50, of hBD1 prior to digestion (squares) and after digestion with ZapA (circles). (B) Antimicrobial activity, as LD50, of LL-37 prior to digestion (squares) and after digestion with ZapA (circles). The reaction mixtures were incubated at 37°C for 8 h.
|
|
|
|---|
ZapA proteolysis of hBD1 and LL-37 is also effective in reducing the bactericidal activity of these antibacterial peptides. Upon incubation for 8 h at 37°C, proteolysis of hBD1 and LL-37 by ZapA reduced the effective bactericidal action of the peptides by at least 7- and 30-fold, respectively. Thus, one of the possible modes of action of the ZapA metalloprotease may be proteolysis of innate defense molecules in the urinary tract. As the enzyme exhibits minimal substrate or amino acid site specificity, it appears that the action of ZapA is not specific or limited to antimicrobial peptides. This virulence factor may therefore provide a general "weapon of mass destruction," rather than a highly focused "smart bomb" approach to protecting P. mirabilis against attack from the host immune system.
In considering the role of ZapA as a generalized bacterial defense against innate immunity response and host defenses, the rate of the enzyme catalysis of its substrates should be considered. Although kcat values are not immediately derived from the data presented herein, it is safe to say that (under the conditions used in the in vitro proteolysis assays) ZapA proteolysis of its substrates is not rapid. For all protein substrates examined and some peptides, e.g., hBD1, reactions of the enzyme and substrate required at least 8 h to yield >80% proteolysis of the substrate. An estimate of the rate of proteolysis for hBD1, as an example, suggests that 1 pmol of ZapA digests 0.6 pmol of hBD1 per h at 37°C, or two molecules of the enzyme are required to hydrolyze one molecule of the peptide in 60 min.
The data presented may be used to indirectly answer questions about the role of ZapA in P. mirabilis virulence and UTIs; however interpretation of the data should be tempered. In preliminary studies leading to this report, wild-type P. mirabilis and a strain defective in ZapA production (27) were used in MIC assays. Both wild-type and ZapA mutant strains are extremely resistant to the four antimicrobial peptides tested (hBD1, hBD2, LL-37, and protegrin; data not shown). This observation is supported by the studies of McCoy et al. (18), who reported that P. mirabilis is highly resistant to the action of antimicrobial peptides (18) and probably uses multiple mechanisms to achieve this resistance. Thus, due to the high native resistance of P. mirabilis to antimicrobial peptides, a more sensitive bacterial strain, E. coli D31, was chosen for MIC analyses, which were used to answer questions about whether ZapA proteolysis reduced the bactericidal activity of hBD1 and LL-37. While the data presented in Fig. 7 clearly demonstrate the effectiveness of ZapA in reducing the bactericidal activity of hBD1 and LL-37, the significance and relative contribution of ZapA in P. mirabilis evasion of the host immune response during UTI remain open issues awaiting experimental confirmation.
Both hBD1 and hBD2 are found in the human urinary tract (9, 15, 26). The results support the conclusion that ZapA effectively cleaves hBD1, yet does not hydrolyze hBD2 (Fig. 3). This is an interesting finding and raises questions about what distinguishes the two peptides during ZapA binding and catalysis. hBD1 and hBD2 are different from one another in their amino acid sequences and sizes, yet they also contain many common characteristics, including the three disulfide bonds and an overall charge distribution characteristic of the ß-defensins. Moreover, several of the putative scissile bonds found in hBD1 and LL-37 proteolytic cleavage fragments also occur in hBD2, which suggests that the enzyme distinguishes hBD1 from hBD2 based on some other molecular property or feature. Further investigation of the reasons behind this difference may uncover the molecular mechanisms used by ZapA and other serralysins to bind to and catalyze their substrate proteins and peptides.
It is safe to conclude from these results that it is inappropriate to call ZapA an IgA-degrading protease, as the enzyme can cleave a wide range of substrates of which IgA is not the best. Instead, a more plausible function for ZapA in P. mirabilis virulence and UTI is as a general proteolytic enzyme that is well suited for an opportunistic urinary tract pathogen such as P. mirabilis. As such, ZapA may aid in the acquisition of carbon and nitrogen for bacterial growth and metabolism through proteolysis of host proteins, some of which may be involved in immune system functions. This double-edged function would not only provide nutrients to the bacteria but also prolong their existence and survival during attack from the host immune defenses.
MALDI-TOF analyses were funded in part from National Center for Research Resources shared-instrumentation grant 1S10-RR14702. This research was supported by an award from the National Institutes of Health (DK48720).
Publication no. 05-105 of the Center of Marine Biotechnology. ![]()
|
|
|---|
-helical antimicrobial peptides. Biopolymers 47:451-463.[CrossRef][Medline]
This article has been cited by other articles:
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Copyright © 2009 by the American Society for Microbiology. For an alternate route to Journals.ASM.org, visit: http://intl-journals.asm.org | More Info»