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Infection and Immunity, October 2005, p. 6639-6646, Vol. 73, No. 10
0019-9567/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/IAI.73.10.6639-6646.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Pamela Schnupf,2,
Mathilde A. Poussin,1
Lauren A. Zenewicz,1
Hao Shen,1 and
Howard Goldfine1*
Department of Microbiology, University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104-6076,1 Department of Molecular and Cell Biology, University of California, Berkeley, California 94720-32022
Received 24 February 2005/ Returned for modification 4 May 2005/ Accepted 8 June 2005
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dal
dat (Lmdd)
were supplemented with 100 µg of D-alanine/ml to
stationary phase at 30°C. Strains containing pKSV7
were selected and maintained with ampicillin (50 µg/ml) in
Escherichia coli and chloramphenicol (10 µg/ml) in
L.
monocytogenes. |
View this table: [in a new window] |
TABLE 1. Strains
used in this study
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Construction of L. monocytogenes mutants.
The DNA sequences for ALO
(31) and B.
anthracis PI-PLC were obtained from the genome of B.
anthracis strain Ames from GenBank
(29). Signal peptides
were determined by using the SignalP server
(http://www.cbs.dtu.dk/services/SignalP-2.0/).
The structural genes for ALO and B. anthracis PI-PLC were used
for the replacement constructions. The mutant constructs were generated
by PCR-mediated sequence overlap extension
(15) with Pfx
High-Fidelity DNA Polymerase, resulting in in-frame gene replacements.
All gene replacements were made under their counterparts' endogenous
promoters and signal peptide sequences on the chromosome. Mutants were
constructed by using derivatives of a shuttle vector pKSV7 for allelic
exchange. DNA sequences of mutant constructs were confirmed by
automated cycle sequencing. Genes replaced in mutant strains are
illustrated in Fig.
1. Oligonucleotide primers used in the present study are as follows: six
primers each were used to replace LLO with ALO in the L.
monocytogenes
dal
dat and wild-type L.
monocytogenes background, respectively, as follows: BALLO-P1
(5'-GGTCTAGAGAGAGCGCTGCTAGGTTTGT-3';
XbaI) plus BALLO-P2
(5'-GCATTACCGGCTTGTGTTTCTGCTTCAGTTTGTTGCGCAA-3')
and DP4315
(5'-ATTGTCGACCGTATTCCTGCTTCTAATTGTTG-3';
SalI) plus DP4824
(5'-CAATTGCGCAACAAACTGAAGCAGAAACACAAGCCGGTAATGC-3')were
used for the upstream flanking sequence of the hly gene;
BALLO-P3
(TTGCGCAACAAACTGAAGCAGAAACACAAGCCGGTAATGC-3')
with BALLO-P4
(5'-CTTAATTTTTTACTTTTACAACTAATGACTAATAGTAGCAG-3')
and DP4825
(5'-GCATTACCGGCTTGTGTTTCTGCTTCAGTTTGTTGCGCAA-3')
with DP4826
(5'-CTTCGGATCCAACTAATGACTAATAGTAGCAGTTGG;
BamHI) were used for DNA sequence encoding ALO from B.
anthracis genomic DNA; and BALLO-P5
(5'-CTGCTACTATTAGTCATTAGTTGTAAAAGTAATAAAAAATTAAG-3')
with BALLO-P6
(5'-GGGGTACCTGCTTCGCAGGAATCTGGCA-3';
KpnI) and DP4827
(5'-AATGGATCCGTAATAAAAAATTAAGAATAAAACC;
BamHI) and DP4828
(5'-ATTGGATCCTTATCGGTCTAGAAACCACCAGAACTTAGC;
BamHI and XbaI) were used for the downstream flanking sequence of the
hly gene. For replacement of L. monocytogenes PI-PLC
with B. anthracis PI-PLC, another six primers were used: P1
(5'-ACTGTCTAGATCTCGCTAATACTCGTGAGCT-3',
with a XbaI site) and P2BA
(5'-GCGAATAAGTCATTAATAAGAGATTAACATATATTATTCCTACAA-3')
were used for the upstream flanking sequence of the plcA gene,
P7BA
(5'-TTGTAGGAATAATATATGTTAATCTCTTATTAATGACTTATTCGC-3')
and P8N
(5'-CCCATTAGGCGGGAAAGCAGCTAGCTCTGTTAATGAGCT-3')
were used for the DNA sequence encoding B. anthracis PI-PLC
from B. anthracis genomic DNA, and P3N
(5'-AGCTCATTAACAGAGCTAGCTGCTTTCCCGCCTAATGGG-3')
and P4
(5'-ACGTGGTACCACTGCATCTCCGTGGTATAC-3',
with a KpnI site) were used for the downstream flanking sequence of the
plcA gene. All PCR products were directly cloned into
pCR-Blunt II-TOPO (Invitrogen) and were cycle
sequenced.
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FIG. 1. Diagram
of the L. monocytogenes PrfA regulon and the mutants
constructed in the present study. The star indicates a nonfunctional
H86A mutation in L. monocytogenes PI-PLC
(1), the black arrows
indicate the replacement of L. monocytogenes PI-PLC with
B. anthracis PI-PLC, and the gray arrows indicate the
replacement of LLO with ALO. BaPI-PLC, B. anthracis
PI-PLC.
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-perfringolysin O (PFO) for detecting ALO
expression. The secondary antibody was a goat anti-rabbit
immunoglobulin G conjugated to horseradish
peroxidase. Expression and purification of recombinant His-tagged hemolysins. Recombinant mature His-tagged LLO and PFO proteins were constructed, expressed, and purified as previously described (12). ALO was PCR amplified from B. anthracis chromosomal DNA with the primers 5-CGGGGGATCCGAAACACAAGCC-3 and 5-CCGGGAATTCCCTAATGACTAATAGTAGC-3 and cloned into the BamHI and EcoRI sites of the pTrcHisA expression vector (Invitrogen), resulting in an ALO fusion protein that starts at E35 for the ALO protein. Recombinant ALO was expressed and purified as previously described by Shepard et al. (32) and stored in buffer (10 mM morpholineethanesulfonic acid, 300 mM NaCl, 1 mM EDTA, 10% glycerol, and 1 mM dithiothreitol buffered to pH 6.5). Purified protein concentrations were determined by the Bradford method.
Hemolytic activity. Hemolytic activity of bacterial broth cultural supernatants was measured by using sheep red blood cells as previously described (28). Hemolytic units were defined as the dilution of the sample at which 50% of the sheep red blood cells lysed. The specific activity of the recombinant His-tagged proteins was determined as described previously (12).
Diff-Quik staining. Bacteria grown in J774 host cells were visualized by using a Diff-Quik staining set (Dade Diagnostics of P. R. Inc.) after bacterial infection for 6 h according to the manufacturer's instructions.
Detection of PI-PLC activity on PI. Enzymatic activity on PI by PI-PLC was detected by using ALOA Listeria agar plates (Microbiology International, Frederick, MD). The size of an opaque halo surrounding a colony reflects the activity on PI. A quantitative method with [3H]inositol-PI was also done as previously described (13).
Detection of PI-PLC activity on glycosyl phosphatidylinositol (GPI)-anchored proteins. Splenocytes were harvested from C57BL/6 mice. Cleavage of the GPI-anchored protein Thy1.2 on CD4+ and CD8+ T cells was measured by fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS). A total of 10 µl from overnight bacterial supernatant was mixed with 106 splenocytes in a well of a 96-well plate and incubated at 37°C for 1 h. Cells were then stained in phosphate-buffered saline (PBS), 1% bovine serum albumin with MAb to CD4, CD8, and Thy1.2. The cells were washed several times with PBS, 1% bovine serum albumin, fixed with 2% paraformaldehyde, and analyzed with a FACSCalibur (Becton Dickinson), and data were analyzed by using FlowJo (version 3.7; TreeStar, Inc.).
Escape from the primary phagocytic vacuole. The escape of L. monocytogenes from the primary vacuole was determined by measuring the percentage of bacteria coated with polymerized actin filaments (stained with Alexa Fluor 568 phalloidin) in the cytosol (16). Briefly, J774 cells were plated and infected by using fluorescein isothiocyanate-labeled bacteria (38) for 90 min, and the ratio of escaped bacteria (red) over the total bacteria (green) was determined based on microscopy with appropriate filters.
Intracellular growth curve. Stationary-phase bacterial cultures were washed and used to infect J774 macrophages on 12 mm glass coverslips at 37°C. After 1 h of infection, 50 µg of gentamicin/ml was added to the culture medium to kill the extracellular bacteria when needed. CFU per coverslip were determined by lysing host cells in sterile water and plating on brain heart infusion agar plates (34, 36).
Plaque formation. Plaque formation assays with murine L2 fibroblasts were performed as previously described (36). Briefly, overnight murine L2 fibroblasts cultured in six-well tissue culture plates were infected with L. monocytogenes for 60 min. The monolayer was then washed with PBS and covered with 2 ml of 1% Dulbecco modified Eagle medium-containing agarose with 10 µg of gentamicin/ml. After incubation at 37°C for 3 days, a second overlay of agarose with Neutral Red was added to allow visualization of plaques. The diameters of plaques were measured and compared to that of the parental strain, Lmdd.
LDH release assay. Lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) release from J774 host cells after bacterial infection was monitored by using the CytoTox 96 nonradioactive cytotoxicity assay kit (Promega) according to the manufacturer's instructions. Briefly, J774 cells were infected with L. monocytogenes strains at a multiplicity of infection, resulting in at least one bacterium per host cell in a 96-well plate for 5 h, and the supernatant from each well was taken for the LDH activity assay. This assay was performed in the absence of gentamicin to favor host cell lysis over rapid bacterial death (7).
FACS analysis of propidium iodide uptake. After bacterial infection, the cytotoxicity level was detected by staining cellular DNA with the fluorescent dye propidium iodide (Molecular Probes) (11, 12). Briefly, monolayers of bone marrow-derived macrophages from C57BL/6 mice, obtained as previously described (36), were infected with L. monocytogenes strains at a multiplicity of infection of one for 30 min and then washed with PBS and incubated until 2 h postinfection at 37°C and 5% CO2. No gentamicin was added in this experiment to avoid the adverse effect of gentamicin on the most cytotoxic strains (13). The bone marrow-derived macrophages were then removed from the petri dish, washed with precooled PBS-10% FBS, stained with propidium iodide, and analyzed by FACS.
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dal
dat
strain (Lmdd), which requires D-alanine for growth, as the
parental strain (37). The
expression of ALO and B. anthracis PI-PLC were confirmed from
the bacterial culture supernatants by Western blotting with PFO and
B. thuringiensis PI-PLC antibodies, respectively (data not
shown). We first analyzed the hemolytic activity of supernatants from the ALO-expressing L. monocytogenes strain. Supernatants from the strain expressing ALO showed 5 to 10-fold higher hemolytic activities at pH 7.4 than those from Lmdd (data not shown). We then compared hemolytic activity using purified proteins. Recombinant ALO showed greater hemolytic specific activity than recombinant LLO and PFO (Fig. 2). We compared the activities of recombinant ALO, PFO, and LLO at pH 5.5 and 7.4. As observed previously, the ratio of activities (pH 5.5/pH 7.4) for LLO is high, 9.0, whereas that of PFO is much lower, 1.8. The ratio of ALO is similar to that of PFO, 1.8, indicating that, unlike LLO, ALO does not have an activity optimum at an acidic pH (2).
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FIG. 2. Specific
hemolytic activities of recombinant cholesterol-dependent cytolysins
(CDC) on sheep red blood cells at the indicated pH. Values represent
the mean ± the SD of three independent
experiments.
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FIG. 3. Detection
of PI-PLC activities. (A) Activity of indicated strains on PI
using ALOA Listeria agar plates; (B) supernatant
activity on PI using a quantitative [3H]inositol-PI method
(13). For L.
monocytogenes PI-PLC (LmPI-PLC) and B. anthracis PI-PLC
(BaPI-PLC), the P value was >0.1 as determined by
unpaired t test of three experiments. There is no activity
detected when an inactive mutant form of L. monocytogenes
PI-PLC, H86A, was used. (C) Activity on the GPI-anchored
protein CD90 as determined by FACS. Left, pure B.
thuringiensis PI-PLC (BtPI-PLC; 6 µg/ml); middle,
supernatant of strain HG-L2002 (B. anthracis PI-PLC
[BaPI-PLC]); right, supernatant of strain Lmdd (L.
monocytogenes PI-PLC [LmPI-PLC]). In several separate experiments
the negative control of untreated cells overlapped with the Lmdd curve
(not
shown).
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To determine the efficiencies of escape by different L. monocytogenes strains, we measured the fraction of bacteria stained with fluorescent phalloidin, which detects polymerized actin surrounding bacteria in the cytosol (16). At 90 min after infection, all mutant strains were found to be defective in escape compared to the Lmdd strain (Table 2). Consistent with previous observations (1), the strain expressing a full-length inactive L. monocytogenes PI-PLC performed like a plcA in-frame deletion strain (3). Escape of the B. anthracis PI-PLC-expressing strain was significantly less than either the Lmdd strain or the inactive mutant PI-PLC strain, indicating that B. anthracis PI-PLC could not functionally replace L. monocytogenes PI-PLC, although they have almost the same activities on PI (Fig. 3A and B). Escape of all of the ALO-expressing strains were significantly lower than the Lmdd strain, as has been observed with a PFO-expressing strain (16).
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View this table: [in a new window] |
TABLE 2. Measurements
of L. monocytogenes phagosomal escape and cell-to-cell spread
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FIG. 4. Intracellular
growth in J774 murine macrophage-like cells. The data shown are
representative of at least three experiments. (A) Growth of
Lmdd strains. (B) Light micrograph of J774 cells 6
h postinfection with Lmdd or Lmdd expressing ALO. For panels A and B,
gentamicin at 50 µg/ml was added at 1 h postinfection
for the duration of the experiment. (C and D) Growth of wild-type
L. monocytogenes expressing LLO (10403S), PFO (DP-L4055), or
ALO (DP-L4450). Gentamicin at 50 µg/ml was added at 1
h postinfection for the duration of the experiment (C) or for
a short pulse from 1 to 1.5 h postinfection (D). L.
monocytogenes with the LLO gene deleted ( hly,
DP-L2161) controls for killing of extracellular bacteria during the
gentamicin pulse. (E and F) Light micrographs of J774 cells 6
h postinfection with WT strain 10403S or derivatives expressing either
PFO or ALO. Gentamicin at 50 µg/ml was added at 1 h
postinfection for the duration of the experiment (E) or for a
short pulse from 1 to 1.5 h postinfection (F). LmPI-PLC,
L. monocytogenes PI-PLC; BaPI-PLC, B. anthracis
PI-PLC.
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Toxicity of L. monocytogenes strains expressing ALO. The third major issue to be addressed by the present study was whether PI-PLC affects the permeabilization of the host cell plasma membrane by ALO. Given the ability of ALO to permeabilize the host cell membrane and allow entry of gentamicin, which kills the infecting bacteria, we compared the effects on cytotoxicity of expression of B. anthracis PI-PLC and L. monocytogenes PI-PLC in strains expressing ALO.
To measure differences in cytotoxicity, we first monitored the release of LDH from the cytosol of J774 cells into the tissue culture medium. Infection with the Lmdd bacteria resulted in ca. 10% LDH release during a 5-h incubation. The same was true for the other two mutant strains expressing LLO (Fig. 5A). Conversely, mutant strains expressing ALO produced much higher release of LDH. ALO in combination with L. monocytogenes PI-PLC exhibited the highest release, which was 96% of the maximal release of LDH. ALO with B. anthracis PI-PLC resulted in 74% of the maximal LDH release, and ALO in combination with inactive L. monocytogenes PI-PLC showed the lowest release, 58% (Fig. 5A).
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FIG. 5. Evaluation
of the integrity of the host cell plasma membrane after L.
monocytogenes infections. (A) LDH release by infected
J774 cells. The release of LDH after infection of J774 cells by each
strain was compared to total LDH determined after lysis with detergent.
Values represent the mean ± the SD of three independent
experiments.
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In summary, with both assays the highest cytotoxicity was observed upon infection with the strain expressing ALO and L. monocytogenes PI-PLC. Less cytotoxicity was observed upon infection with the strain expressing ALO and B. anthracis PI-PLC. The least cytotoxicity was seen when ALO was expressed with an inactive form of L. monocytogenes PI-PLC.
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LLO has uniquely evolved to decrease its toxicity in the host through having much lower activity at pH 7.4 than at the acidic pH of the phagosome (11, 12) and by having a PEST-like N-terminal sequence, which results in very low LLO levels when L. monocytogenes is growing in the host cell cytosol (7). ALO, which has 87% similarity to PFO, but only 64% similarity to LLO (18), does not have a PEST-like sequence, and its activity at pH 7.4 is almost as high as at pH 5.5 (Fig. 2). Expression of ALO by L. monocytogenes resulted in strong toxicity to both J774 cells and murine bone marrow-derived macrophages, as evidenced by permeabilization of infected cells to gentamicin (Fig. 4) and propidium iodide (Fig. 5B), and by the release of LDH from infected cells (Fig. 5A). When PFO was expressed by L. monocytogenes, similar toxicity was observed (Fig. 4E and F) (16). Mutations in PFO that altered its pH optimum to resemble that of LLO resulted in much less toxicity to the host cell (17). Mutants of LLO that increase its activity at neutral pH are more toxic (12). Therefore, the data suggest that ALO is functionally closer to PFO than LLO.
B. anthracis PI-PLC is almost identical to the well-characterized PI-PLCs from B. cereus and B. thuringiensis (14) and, like them, it is active on both PI and GPI-anchored proteins (Fig. 3 and unpublished data). L. monocytogenes expressing B. anthracis PI-PLC was able to form plaques in L2 monolayers, but the plaque size was significantly reduced compared to both strain Lmdd and a strain expressing inactive L. monocytogenes PI-PLC (Table 2). A comparison of their crystal structures has shown that L. monocytogenes PI-PLC and B. cereus PI-PLC have similar molecular structures; however, B. cereus PI-PLC has an extra ß-strand (Vb) which is thought to be needed for recognition of GPI anchors (9, 23). B. anthracis PI-PLC has 97% similarity to B. cereus PI-PLC, and both have exactly the same Vb ß-strand amino acid sequence. As expected, supernatants from L. monocytogenes expressing either B. cereus PI-PLC or B. anthracis PI-PLC have similar activities on the GPI-anchored protein Thy1 (unpublished data). In another study, we showed that expression of B. cereus PI-PLC inhibits escape of L. monocytogenes from a primary vacuole, blocks cell-to-cell spread, and reduces virulence in mice. We hypothesized that L. monocytogenes PI-PLC has evolved for intracellular growth and virulence by its greatly reduced activity on GPI-anchored proteins through the absence of the Vb ß-strand. We speculate that cleavage of GPI-anchored proteins on the cell surface or more likely in the vacuole hampers escape and cell-to-cell spread of L. monocytogenes. The cleavage of GPI-anchored proteins by B. anthracis PI-PLC could influence the normal function of LLO directly or through host cell signals. At this stage, we also do not know which GPI-anchored proteins are cleaved by B. anthracis PI-PLC. Future studies will help to shed light on these questions.
The study of L. monocytogenes PI-PLC has been focused on its role in escape of the bacterium from the primary vacuole and its synergistic effects with LLO and PC-PLC during cell-to-cell spread (1, 3, 34). The abilities of L. monocytogenes PI-PLC to cleave PI, produce diacylglycerol, and activate protein kinase C isoforms in host cells appear to be important in its early interactions with the macrophages (38, 39). In contrast, B. anthracis PI-PLC does not complement L. monocytogenes PI-PLC in escape from the primary phagocytic vacuole; indeed, it appears to be inhibitory (Table 2).
In the present study, we used the combination of ALO with different PI-PLCs to investigate potential contributions of PI-PLC to host cell membrane damage. This method proved to be useful for evaluating the role of PI-PLC in its interplay with ALO. We demonstrated that, in combination with ALO, L. monocytogenes PI-PLC resulted in greater host membrane damage than B. anthracis PI-PLC. An early finding in the study of anthrax was an alkaline phosphatasemia produced during experimental infections of animals with B. anthracis. This was later determined to result from the cleavage of GPI-linked alkaline phosphatase by a bacterial activity (19, 35), which we have now characterized. Thus, cleavage of GPI anchors is manifested during B. anthracis infection. Its role, if any, in the pathogenesis of B. anthracis, is yet to be determined.
B. anthracis is hemolytic to human red blood cells, especially under anaerobic conditions (18). Therefore, it is possible that the expression of cytolytic genes of B. anthracis is induced under certain environmental conditions. The genes for ALO and PI-PLC, along with that for PC-PLC appear to be upregulated early during macrophage infection by germinated B. anthracis spores (18). Recent studies have suggested that the regulation of virulence genes in B. anthracis, either by a truncated pleiotropic transcriptional regulator PlcR or by the transactivator AtxA, is complex (22, 26, 33). Early B. anthracis escape from macrophage by lysis of the cell is regulated by AtxA but does not require the toxin genes expressed from pXO1 (8). Taken together, the results we have presented here suggest a role for ALO and B. anthracis PI-PLC in B. anthracis intracellular infection.
ALO has recently been shown to be an agonist for Toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4) (25). It is intriguing to note that CD14, a GPI-anchored protein, serves as a coreceptor of TLR4 (20). This suggests a site at which ALO and B. anthracis PI-PLC may function together during B. anthracis infections. To further examine the precise functions of putative B. anthracis virulence factors, it will be necessary to generate defined mutant strains and test their roles in pathogenesis in both tissue culture and animal models of infection.
dal
dat strain, Rod Tweten for recombinant ALO, and Mary
F. Roberts for a sample of recombinant PI-PLC from B.
thuringiensis. We thank Daniel Portnoy for careful reading of the
manuscript. This study was supported by U.S. Public Health Service grants AI-056275 (H.G.), AI-27655 (to Daniel A. Portnoy) and the University of Pennsylvania Research Foundation. P.S. was also supported by a PGSB scholarship from the National Science and Engineering Research Council of Canada.
Z.W. and P.S. contributed equally to this study. ![]()
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