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Infection and Immunity, August 2005, p. 4753-4765, Vol. 73, No. 8
0019-9567/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/IAI.73.8.4753-4765.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Universidade Federal de São Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil 04023-062,1 Department of Microbiology and Immunology and Center for Vaccine Development, University of Maryland, Baltimore, Maryland 21201,2 Department of Microbiology and Immunology and Department of Pathology, University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston, Texas 77555-10703
Received 6 January 2005/ Returned for modification 11 February 2005/ Accepted 4 April 2005
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lda+ clone to HEp-2 cells. Electron microscopy revealed a nonfimbrial structure surrounding the bacterial cell. |
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A key aspect of enteric infection caused by E. coli is the colonization of the gastrointestinal tract, which is mediated by specific adherence factors. EPEC and EHEC strains produce an adherence factor, called intimin, which is chromosomally encoded by the eae (EPEC attaching and effacing) gene located within the locus for enterocyte effacement (LEE) pathogenicity island (21, 31). The more restrictive designation of EHEC refers to those Stx-producing E. coli strains that possess the LEE. In EPEC, a plasmid-encoded type IV bundle-forming pilus (Bfp) has also been shown to be required for intestinal colonization (16). Bfp mediates bacterium-to-bacterium adherence, resulting in the formation of compact microcolonies on HEp-2 epithelial cell monolayers after 3 hours, which is referred to as localized adherence (LA) (11, 46). E. coli O26 strains that are LEE+ stx negative and EAF bfp negative are classified as atypical EPEC and differ from typical EPEC in several characteristics. Typical EPEC, found primarily in developing countries, affects infants and children under the age of 2 years, whereas atypical EPEC strains have caused outbreaks of diarrheal disease in both children and adults in industrialized countries (22, 54). In the absence of Bfp, atypical EPEC strains can still adhere to HEp-2 cells in either a diffuse-adherence or aggregative-adherence pattern (37). Some clinical isolates of serogroups O26, O55, and O111 show a Bfp-independent localized-adherence pattern similar to the LA, called localized-adherent-like (43). The majority of these strains form microcolonies on HEp-2 epithelial monolayers, but only after 6 hours of infection, whereas LA is apparent after 3 hours. While the presence of Bfp correlates well with LA, not all LA+ EPEC strains are Bfp positive. Studies by other investigators (15, 43, 47) have reported EAF Bfp EPEC serotypes that exhibit localized adherence, but so far, no characterization of the factor(s) responsible for this phenotype has been reported. Fischer et al. (13) reported an EAF stx-negative eae+ O26:NM strain isolated from a calf with diarrhea that was LA+ on HEp-2 cells, but the adherence factor was not identified. E. coli 22, an O26:H11 isolate originally obtained from an infant with diarrhea in Brazil, is stx negative eae+ and exhibits the LA phenotype within 3 hours, identical to the Bfp-mediated phenotype. However, E. coli 22 does not harbor the EAF plasmid or the bfpA gene. The aim of this study was to identify the genetic determinants conferring adherence in this strain and to compare it to those encoding other known E. coli adherence factors. We report the cloning, nucleotide sequence, and organization of a chromosomal locus encoding an afimbrial adhesin with homologies to the operons encoding enterotoxigenic E. coli (ETEC) K88 and CS31A fimbriae and demonstrate its role in mediating bacterial adherence to epithelial cells. In addition, we present data showing the prevalence of these gene sequences across diverse E. coli serogroups. Our data indicate that this new fimbria is a member of the K88 family of adhesins.
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TABLE 1. Bacterial strains used in this study
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Primer sequences are listed in Table 2. The extension times for primer pairs used for determining the upstream junction of the LDA island were 2 min (K1/K3), 30 s (K2/K3), 3 min (K4/K6), 2 min (K5/K7), and 7 min (K3/K2792).
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TABLE 2. Primers used in PCR amplifications and plasmid constructions
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DNA hybridization. Colony blot and Southern blot hybridizations (45) were performed at 65°C. Gene probes, bfpA (15), stx (39), ehxA (pO157 plasmid sequences) (28), ldaG, ldaH, and kanamycin were generated either by PCR or by restriction digestion, gel purified, and labeled with [32P]dCTP using a Rediprime kit (Amersham Biosciences, Piscataway, NJ) according to the manufacturer's instructions.
Transposon mutagenesis.
Mini-Tn10::kan was introduced into E. coli 22 or E. coli DH5
(pV-B-6) by electroporation with pBSL180 (3). Isolates were selected on L agar with kanamycin or kanamycin-ampicillin and tested for adherence in the HEp-2 assay.
Cloning of LDA locus.
Chromosomal DNA was isolated from E. coli 22 using the EZ-DNA kit (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA) according to the manufacturer's instructions and then partially digested with Sau3AI and ligated into the BamHI-digested cosmid vector pHC79. The ligation was packaged into bacteriophage lambda particles using the GigaPak III Gold packaging kit (Stratagene), transfected into E. coli DH5
, and plated onto L agar with ampicillin. Colonies were tested for localized adherence in the HEp-2 adherence assay. One Apr LA+ colony harboring a cosmid, designated pV-B-6, was selected for further analysis.
A minimal-size subclone that still possessed the ability to adhere to HEp-2 cells was obtained by digesting pV-B-6 with BssHII, followed by self-ligation. The resulting clone, pIJ9, was digested with StuI and self-ligated, yielding pIJ20, which is ca. 21.5 kb in size. pIJ20 was transformed into E. coli DH5
and tested for HEp-2 adherence.
Construction of bacterial deletion mutants and plasmids. A kanamycin-resistant subclone of plasmid pV-B-6-Tn, designated pLDAH, was generated by ligating an EcoRI-HindIII restriction fragment that contained the kan gene (present in the mini Tn10::kan cassette) and flanking lda sequences into pUC18.
A 699-bp nonpolar chromosomal deletion in ldaG was constructed in E. coli 22 by inserting sequences flanking the ldaG gene into suicide plasmid pHM5 (44). Primer sets K3094/K3095 and K3096/K3097 were used in conjunction with Pfx polymerase to generate fragments containing 950 bp upstream and 920 bp downstream of the ldaG gene, respectively. The fragments were ligated into suicide vector pHM5 to create pIJ12. The deletion was marked by the insertion of a kanamycin gene cassette that contained flanking inverted-repeat FLP sites amplified from pKD4 (12). A 1.6-kb kanamycin cassette was amplified from pKD4 using primer set K2938/K2937 and blunt-end ligated into the XbaI-digested/Klenow-treated site of pIJ12, yielding pIJ13. Plasmid pIJ13 was introduced into E. coli 22 by conjugal mating with E. coli SM10
pir and directly plated onto modified L agar containing 5% sucrose and 25 µg/ml kanamycin. Individual colonies were then patched onto McConkey media to distinguish E. coli 22 (lac+) from E. coli SM10
pir (lac negative). One lactose-positive isolate exhibiting Kmr and Aps was called ICS1. The kanamycin marker was then eliminated from the chromosome with plasmid pCP20, which harbors the flp recombinase gene on a temperature-sensitive replicon (12). E. coli ICS1 was electroporated with pCP20 and plated on L agar with ampicillin. After overnight incubation at 30°C, colonies were picked and grown under nonselective pressure on L agar at 42°C. Colonies were separately patched onto media containing kanamycin or ampicillin to check for loss of the kanamycin cassette and pCP20, respectively. One Kms Aps isolate that tested negative for ldaG by Southern blotting was designated LDA1.
A pIJ22-1 plasmid-cured derivative of LDA1 was created using plasmid incompatibility. pIJ22 was digested with EcoRI and ligated to a chloramphenicol gene cassette (cat), creating pIJ30. Plasmid pIJ30 was electroporated into the ldaG mutant LDA1 and plated onto L agar with chloramphenicol. A Cmr Kms mutant that was negative for Hep-2 adherence was called LDA3.
Sequencing and analysis. The nucleotide sequence of the cosmid pV-B-6 was determined by first subcloning small overlapping PstI, BamHI, or EcoRI restriction fragments into plasmid vector pAYCY177 or pACYC184. Plasmid DNA was prepared by cesium chloride density gradient centrifugation, and cycle sequencing was performed using the ABI 3100 Gene Analyzer. Nucleotide sequences were analyzed for open reading frames (ORFs) using Redasoft Visual Cloning 2000 DNA software (Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research). BLAST searches and comparisons, as well as DNA-protein analysis, were conducted using databases at the National Center for Biotechnology Information (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/BLAST/), The Institute for Genomic Research (http://www.tigr.org), and the CLUSTAL W (http://clustalw.genome.jp) websites.
Preparation of whole-cell lysates and heat-extracted proteins and identification of LdaG by N-terminal sequencing. E. coli strains grown on MacConkey agar at 37°C were harvested from the plates with 1 ml PBS (pH 7.4). The samples were aliquoted into portions of approximately 4.0 x 108 bacteria for whole-cell lysates and 4.0 x 109 bacteria for heat-extracted proteins. The whole-cell lysate samples were harvested by centrifugation at 12,000 x g for 5 min at room temperature, washed in 1 ml PBS (pH 7.4), centrifuged again, resuspended in 200 µl of sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) sample buffer, and lysed at 100°C for 10 min. The cell debris was removed by centrifugation, and the supernatant was transferred to a fresh tube and stored at 20°C. The heat-extracted protein samples were harvested by centrifugation at 3,000 x g for 10 min, resuspended in 160 µl of PBS (pH 7.4), and incubated at 60°C for 30 min. The samples were then pelleted by centrifugation at 3,000 x g for 10 min, and the supernatant was transferred to a fresh tube; 40 µl of 5x SDS sample buffer was added, and the samples were boiled at 100°C for 5 min. The samples were separated by SDS-12% PAGE minigels, and proteins were stained with Coomassie blue. The 25-kDa protein that was highly expressed in strain 22 was excised from the gel (whole-cell lysate and heat-extracted proteins) and sent for N-terminal sequencing at the Stanford University sequencing facility (Palo Alto, CA).
Production of LdaG antiserum.
A heat extraction of E. coli DH5
(pV-B-6) was prepared and separated on a 12% SDS-PAGE gel and stained with Coomassie blue. The 25-kDa LdaG protein was excised from the gel, eluted using a Mini Whole Gel Eluter (Bio-Rad), and extensively dialyzed in water. New Zealand White rabbits were immunized subcutaneously with 100 µg of purified LdaG protein conjugated with complete Freund's adjuvant. The animals were inoculated 3 weeks later with the same dose of protein in complete Freund's adjuvant. Ten days later, blood was drawn and the serum was collected.
Western blot assay. Heat-extracted proteins were separated on a 12% SDS-PAGE gel and transferred to Immobilon-P membranes (53). The membranes were blocked overnight with 5% bovine serum albumin in Tris-buffered saline (pH 7.4) plus 0.1% Tween 20 (TBS-Tween 20). Rabbit anti-LdaG antiserum (1:10,000) was incubated for 1 h and washed with TBS-Tween 20. Goat anti-rabbit immunoglobulin G-horseradish peroxidase (1:50,000) (Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis, MO) was incubated for 1 h and washed with TBS-Tween 20. The protein was detected using the ECL Chemiluminescent Western Blotting Detection kit (Amersham Biosciences, Piscataway, NJ) according to the manufacturer's instructions.
Immunogold labeling and electron microscopy. Strains were grown statically overnight at 37°C in MacConkey broth (Difco), pelleted at 5,000 x g, resuspended in PBS (pH 7.4), and allowed to adhere to Formvar-carbon-coated copper grids (200 mesh; Electron Microscopy Sciences). The grids were floated on drops of rabbit anti-LdaG antiserum (1:100 dilution) for 30 min. After being washed, the grids were placed onto 10-nm-gold-labeled goat anti-rabbit sera (1:20 dilution; Electron Microscopy Sciences) for 30 min. After being further washed in PBS and distilled water, the grids were negatively stained with 1% phosphotungstic acid, pH 6.8 (Kodak), and visualized in a Joel JEM 1200 EX II transmission electron microscope at 80 kV.
Nucleotide sequence accession number. The GenBank accession number for the lda gene sequence is AY858803.
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FIG. 1. HEp-2 adherence assay. (A) E. coli 22 wild type. (B) E. coli DH5 (pV-B-6). (C) E. coli DH5 (pV-B-6-Tn).
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(pV-B-6), and isolates were selected on L agar with kanamycin and ampicillin. One isolate resistant to ampicillin and kanamycin that tested negative for adherence (pV-B-6-Tn) was chosen for further analysis (Fig. 1C). DNA sequencing of a subclone of pV-B-6 (pLDAH) revealed an open reading frame, ldaH, whose predicted protein product shares 73% amino acid identity with that of the E. coli K88 fimbrial gene faeH (6), suggesting that this region might include genes involved in a novel adherence factor (Fig. 2). This region was named the locus for diffuse adherence (lda).
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FIG. 2. Comparison of predicted amino acid sequence of LdaH with E. coli K88 fimbrial subunit FaeH. Identical residues in both proteins are indicated by asterisks, and conserved residues are indicated by dots (:, strongly similar; ., weakly similar). The alignment was created by CLUSTAL W.
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FIG. 3. Maps of lda and K88 fae loci (drawn to scale). The locations and directions of genes are indicated by arrows, and the point of Tn5 insertion in pV-B-6-Tn is shown by an inverted triangle. A line scale drawn below indicates the size in kb. The shading patterns within the arrows indicate the predicted functions of the proteins as indicated.
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TABLE 3. Description of lda open reading frames
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There are four ORFs (ORF1, -2, -5, and -6) that share 37 to 39% nucleotide homology with genes encoding transposases and insertion sequence-like sequences, suggesting that this region could have been horizontally acquired from another organism. ORF3 shows 87% identity to the hypothetical E. coli YbdN protein (9), which is a member of the phosphoadenosine phosphosulfate reductase family and may play a role in amino acid transport and metabolism. Lastly, ORF4 is similar to conserved hypothetical proteins of unknown function but shows some limited amino acid identity to YdbM (9), so it may function similarly to ORF3.
The lda locus is part of a putative pathogenicity island. The flanking transposase-like sequences and lower G+C content suggested that this region could be part of a mobile element introduced as a block into the E. coli chromosome. To determine the chromosomal location of the lda region in E. coli 22, we examined the sequences flanking the 5' and 3' ends of the lda locus in cosmid clone pV-B-6 and compared the sequence to the published E. coli K-12 MG1655 genome (9). DNA sequence analysis revealed that the upstream LDA junction was within the proP gene (Fig. 4). Unfortunately, sequences within pV-B-6 did not extend far enough downstream, and so we relied on PCR analysis to determine the downstream junction. Based on E. coli K-12 and LDA sequence data, we designed primers downstream of the proP gene and one primer (K2792) within the region of lda in cosmid pV-B-6. Primer sets K1/K3, K2/K3, K4/K6, and K5/K7 all yielded the same size products from E. coli MG1655 and E. coli 22, indicating that the region downstream of proP was the same in both strains. PCR amplification using primer set K3/K2792 yielded a 6.5-kb product with E. coli 22. No PCR product was obtained with E. coli MG1655, indicating that this region was not present in K-12. These results confirmed that the lda island (ca. 26 kb) is inserted within the proP gene.
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FIG. 4. Chromosomal location of LDA island. Wide arrows indicate the locations and directions of ORFs and genes. The interrupted proP gene is represented as a discontinuous filled arrow. The small arrows indicate the locations of PCR primers. The region encompassing the cosmid clone is represented by a thin horizontal line. Double bold vertical lines indicate gaps in the sequence.
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TABLE 4. Prevalence of ldaH sequences in E. coli eae+ bfp-negative strainsa
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FIG. 5. HEp-2 adherence assay. (A) E. coli LDA1. (B) E. coli XL-10(pIJ22). (C) E. coli LDA3 mutant. (D) E. coli LDA3(pIJ20) complement.
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and an insertion mutation within the cosmid abolished this phenotype, we hypothesized that the failure to abolish adherence following mutation of ldaG in E. coli 22 indicated the existence of a second adherence factor in the strain. Plasmid analysis revealed that this strain contains at least five plasmids (Fig. 6), and the possibility of a plasmid-encoded adhesin was investigated. Plasmids were extracted from a collection of transposon-mutagenized E. coli 22 isolates (see Materials and Methods), purified by CsCl2 gradient centrifugation, transformed into E. coli XL-10, and selected on L agar with kanamycin. The resulting transformants were tested for adherence on HEp-2 cells, and one Kmr transformant, designated E. coli(pIJ22), exhibited a localized adherence phenotype (Fig. 5B). The size of pIJ22 did not correspond to that of any plasmid present in the wild-type strain (taking into account the addition of the mini-Tn10::kan), and we therefore presumed that the parent plasmid had suffered a deletion. To identify which of the five wild-type plasmids encoded adherence in E. coli 22
ldaG (LDA1), an EcoRI restriction fragment of pIJ22 was used to probe a Southern blot of the unrestricted plasmids isolated from wild-type E. coli 22. A large plasmid (pIJ22-1) was identified as containing homologous sequences (Fig. 6) and was targeted for curing by plasmid incompatibility using a chloramphenicol derivative of pIJ22 (see Materials and Methods). The resulting plasmid-cured strain, called LDA3, was negative for adhesion on HEp-2 cells (Fig. 5C) and was confirmed by agarose gel electrophoresis to have lost pIJ22-1 (Fig. 6, lane 2).
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FIG. 6. Plasmid profiles. M, 1-kb DNA ladder markers (Invitrogen); lane 1, E. coli 22; lane 2, E. coli LDA3. The arrow indicates the location of pIJ22-1. The asterisk in lane 2 identifies pIJ30, used to cure pIJ22-1.
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ldaG mutation. As seen in Fig. 5D, LDA3(pIJ20) adheres to the HEp-2 cells in a diffuse pattern identical to that of E. coli DH5
(pV-B-6) (compare Fig. 1B and 5D). These results confirm that E. coli 22 contains two genetic loci that encode HEp-2 adherence factors. One adhesin, encoded by the chromosomal lda locus, expresses diffuse adherence, and the other adhesin (or an essential regulator of adhesion expression), expressing localized adherence, is encoded by a plasmid. Expression and detection of LdaG. Crude fimbrial preparations of E. coli 22 and LDA3 were obtained through whole-cell lysates and heat extracts. A broad band with an apparent molecular mass of 25 kDa was present in the heat extracts of E. coli 22 and to a lesser degree in the whole-cell lysates and was absent in the LDA3 extracts (Fig. 7A). The abundance of this protein is consistent with its being a major fimbrial structural subunit. The 25-kDa band was excised from the gel, and its N-terminal amino acid sequence was determined. The sequence, SDWTDNQPAGDI, corresponds to the mature form of LdaG after a 22-amino-acid putative signal sequence, MKKTLLALAVVASAVVSGSALA, has been removed.
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FIG. 7. Detection of LdaG. (A) SDS-PAGE of whole-cell lysates (lanes 1 and 2) and heat-extracted proteins (lanes 3 and 4) from E. coli 22 (lanes 1 and 3) and E. coli LDA1 (lanes 2 and 4). The arrow indicates the location of LdaG (lanes 1 and 3). (B) Western blot analysis of LdaG. E. coli 22 (lane 1), E. coli LDA3 (lane 2), and E. coli DH5 (pIJ20) (lane 3) are shown.
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(pV-B-6), containing the cloned lda region, to the HEp-2 cells, whereas the preimmune serum from the same rabbit did not inhibit adhesion (Fig. 8A and B). Treatment of wild-type E. coli 22 with the antiserum did not inhibit LA adhesion even at a 1:5 dilution, providing further evidence that there are two factors that mediate Hep-2 adherence by this strain (Fig. 8C).
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FIG. 8. Antibody inhibition of HEp-2 adherence. (A) E. coli DH5 (pV-B-6) incubated with preimmune serum (1:50 dilution). (B) E. coli DH5 (pV-B-6) incubated with -LdaG antiserum (1:50 dilution). (C) E. coli 22 incubated with -LdaG antiserum (1:5 dilution).
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FIG. 9. Immunogold labeling and negative staining of LDA. (A and B) E. coli 22. The bars represent 200 nm. (C) E. coli 22. The bar represents 50 nm. (D) E. coli LDA1. The bar represents 200 nm. (E) E. coli XL10(pIJ20). The bar represents 200 nm.
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Atypical EPEC strain 22 was originally investigated because of its ability to form microcolonies on HEp-2 cells and its lack of hybridization to known fimbrial-gene probes. Our analysis revealed that there are two factors contributing to the adherence phenotype of this strain. The first adhesin is encoded by a chromosomal locus, lda, which gives a diffuse pattern of adherence on HEp-2 cells when cloned into a nonadhesive K-12 strain. A chromosomal mutation in the major structural gene, ldaG, abated but did not abolish HEp-2 adherence by wild-type E. coli 22. The second adhesin is a plasmid-encoded factor, which by itself in E. coli XL-10(pIJ22) forms isolated microcolonies on HEp-2 cells, albeit fewer and smaller than those of wild-type E. coli 22 (compare Fig. 5B to 1A). Elimination of this plasmid, along with the ldaG chromosomal mutation in E. coli 22 (LDA3), results in complete lack of adherence to HEp-2 cells. Complementation of the double mutant LDA3 (
ldaG pIJ22) with pIJ20 (lda+) restored the diffuse-adherence phenotype but not the localized adherence originally observed in the wild-type strain (compare Fig. 5D to 1A). Thus, it is not known if the diffuse-adherence property of LDA is masked by the expression of a second adhesin encoded on pIJ22 in wild-type E. coli 22 or if these two factors are acting concomitantly to give the full localized-adherence pattern. For example, pIJ22 could be involved in expressing another factor(s) that regulates the LA phenotype. Indeed, one previously described regulator that influences the LA phenotype in EPEC is TrcA; null mutations in trcA produced smaller than normal adherent microcolonies compared to wild-type EPEC (52). The nature of this second LA adherence phenotype associated with pIJ22 is unknown and is being investigated.
The organization and predicted protein sequence similarities of the lda locus closely resemble those of the K88 fae operon (6), although it also shows considerable identity to the ETEC CS31A clp fimbrial operon (14) (Table 4) and to a lesser extent the rabbit EPEC ral (1) fimbrial operon (data not shown). It is interesting that the amino acid sequence of the putative major structural gene, LdaG, is related more closely to the chromosomally encoded F41 adhesin structural subunit (56%) than it is to any of the variants of the plasmid-encoded K88 FaeG structural subunits (23%). The specificity of fimbrial adhesins for their host cells is well documented (32, 50). ETEC strains harboring the F41 fimbrial antigen are pathogenic for cattle, swine, and lambs, whereas ETEC K88 strains are pathogenic for swine (34). The importance of LDA-mediated adhesion in the pathogenicity of these strains in human disease is not clear, but the isolation of this O26 isolate from the stool of a patient suffering from diarrhea from whom no other pathogen could be isolated would be consistent with a role in disease. In addition, although our sample size was small (only five strains, each of a different serotype), it is also of interest to note that the two ldaG+ strains were stx negative and the three ldaG strains were stx+, further suggesting that Lda might be specific in the pathogenesis of atypical EPEC.
Three of the minor subunits, LdaC, LdaH, and LdaI, show considerable identity (85%, 73%, and 59%) to the FaeC, FaeH, and FaeI proteins of K88 fimbriae, respectively. The closely related FaeH and ClpH proteins show 88% identity to each other. Previous investigations have reported extensive DNA homologies between K88-related ancillary proteins (4, 5, 30), and in fact, some can be used interchangeably for fimbrial expression (25). Therefore, the nucleotide homologies seen within the minor subunit, ldaH, among strains of different serotypes were not so surprising (Table 3). LDA appears to belong to a family of fimbrial adhesins that may share a conserved mechanism of pilin production while possessing a unique structural subunit specific for host-fimbria recognition by O26 strains. Indeed, LdaE has striking identity (75% and 82%) to FaeE and ClpE periplasmic chaperones, respectively, suggesting that it too is a member of the chaperone-assisted pilus assembly mechanism, similar to the prototypic Pap operon (8, 50). It is not known how much homology is shared between E. coli O26:H11 and the ldaH+ ldaG-negative isolates outside the ldaH gene, but the possibility that they may be closely related is very intriguing, and we are exploring this hypothesis.
This is the first reported sequence of a novel adhesin found in an atypical EPEC strain. Like many known fimbrial loci, LDA is predicted to contain regulatory genes (ldaA and ldaB), a periplasmic chaperone (ldaE), an usher (ldaD), a major structural gene (ldaG), and a few ancillary genes (ldaC, ldaF, ldaH, and ldaI) thought to aid in the formation of the fimbriae. Unlike its plasmid-borne K88, CS31A, and Ral fimbrial counterparts, Lda is located within a genomic island that is absent from the K-12 strain MG1655 and has not been reported in any of the E. coli genomes so far described. The insertion of this region into the proP gene, along with the transposon sequences flanking the LDA locus, suggests that this region has been horizontally acquired as a pathogenicity island (18). Additionally, lda apparently does not encode a well-defined fimbrial structure but rather one with a flexible morphological appearance similar to nonfimbrial antigens. Like the Ral (1), CS6 (56), and Afa (24) fibrillae, LDA is wiry, unstructured, and rather difficult to visualize under the electron microscope. A comparative exchange of the structural proteins of these distinct fimbriae would provide a useful understanding of the pili and adhesins associated with these E. coli strains. Additional work is needed to characterize the regulation and role in virulence of the LDA adhesin.
This work was supported by NIH grants AI21657 and DK58957 to J.B.K. A.G.T. was supported by institutional funds from the UTMB John Sealy Memorial Endowment Fund for Biomedical Research and the Gastrointestinal Research Interdisciplinary Program. I.C.A.S. was supported with the help of a 2003 ASM International Fellowship Award.
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