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Infection and Immunity, September 2005, p. 5524-5529, Vol. 73, No. 9
0019-9567/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/IAI.73.9.5524-5529.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Identification of a New Virulence Factor, BvfA, in Brucella suis
Jean-Philippe Lavigne,1,2
Gilles Patey,1
Felix J. Sangari,3
Gisèle Bourg,1
Michel Ramuz,1
David O'Callaghan,1* and
Sylvie Michaux-Charachon1,2
Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale U431, UFR Médecine, CS83021, Avenue Kennedy, 30908 Nîmes Cedex 02, France,1
Laboratoire de Bactériologie-Virologie, CHU de Nîmes, Groupe Hospitalo-Universitaire de Carémeau, Place du Professeur Robert Debré, 30029 Nîmes Cedex 09, France,2
Departmento de Biología Molecular, Facultad de Medicina, Universidad de Cantabria, Unidad Asociada al Centro de Investigaciones Biológicas, Cardenal Herrera Oria s/n, 39011-Santander, Spain3
Received 7 March 2005/
Returned for modification 13 April 2005/
Accepted 2 May 2005

ABSTRACT
We report the identification of BvfA (for
Brucella virulence
factor A), a small periplasmic protein unique to the genus
Brucella,
which is essential for the virulence of
Brucella suis. A BvfA
knockout mutant was highly attenuated both in in vitro macrophage
infection assays and in vivo in the murine model of brucellosis.
Fluorescence-activated cell sorting analysis with green fluorescent
protein fusions showed that the expression of
bvfA is induced
within macrophages by phagosome acidification and coregulated
with the
B. suis virB operon, suggesting that it too may play
a role in the establishment of the intracellular replication
niche.

INTRODUCTION
Brucella spp. are facultative intracellular gram-negative bacteria.
They are pathogenic for many mammalian species, including humans.
Brucellosis is a chronic infection causing abortion and sterility
in domestic mammals and a chronic undulant fever in humans (
6,
42). The key aspect of
Brucella virulence is its ability to
survive and multiply within professional and nonprofessional
phagocytes (
6). To do this,
Brucella perturbs the maturation
of the phagosome, subverts vesicular trafficking within infected
eukaryotic cells, and creates a unique intracellular niche in
which it multiplies (
1,
35,
36). Mutagenesis studies have identified
a number of factors, including smooth lipopolysaccharide, stress
response proteins, response regulators, and metabolic genes
required for virulence in in vitro and animal models (
10,
13,
15,
18,
23,
28). Recently, a type IV secretion system (T4SS)
encoded by the
virB operon has been identified as an essential
virulence factor. Mutants lacking the T4SS are unable to survive
and multiply in both macrophages and epithelial cells, as well
as in the mouse virulence model (
15,
20,
33). A possible role
of the T4SS in virulence is to inject effector molecules, which
induces the establishment of the replication niche, into the
host cell (
6). They allow the
Brucella-containing phagosome
to escape from the classical endosomal trafficking pathway and
avoid fusion with late endosomes (
4,
9,
31).
With the aim of finding the effectors of the virB T4SS, we developed a new strategy using translational fusions to the Yersinia YopP toxin as a reporter. The use of this technique led to the identification of one candidate effector. However, although experiments during its characterization suggested that it is not a VirB effector, it is a novel virulence factor that we named BvfA, for Brucella virulence factor A. A B. suis bvfA null mutant is highly attenuated in in vitro and in vivo virulence models. Expression of bvfA is induced within macrophages by phagosome acidification, suggesting that it too may play a role in the establishment of the intracellular replication niche.

MATERIALS AND METHODS
Bacterial strains and plasmids.
All
Brucella strains used in this study were derived from
B. suis 1330 (ATCC 23444
T) and are listed in Table
1, as are the
plasmids and oligonucleotides used in the construction of mutants
or fusions with
yopP or
gfp. Plasmid constructions were performed
in
Escherichia coli DH5

and
B. suis 1330 by standard protocols
(
2). An isogenic mutant in the
bvfA gene was constructed by
introduction of a kanamycin resistance cassette and allelic
replacement, as described previously (
16). Gene inactivation
was confirmed by both PCR and Southern blot analysis.
Plasmid constructs. (i) pBBR1-YopP.
A 909-bp fragment containing the promoterless
yopP gene was
amplified from
Yersinia enterocolitica pYVO8 (
38) using primers
YopEcoU and YopXbaL containing, respectively, EcoRI and XbaI
sites. The PCR-amplified product was digested with EcoRI and
XbaI and cloned into EcoRI/XbaI-digested pBBR1MCS4 (
25). This
plasmid was used for the library construction.
(ii) pBBR1-BvfA.
A 1,282-bp fragment encompassing the bvfA gene was amplified from B. suis 1330 genomic DNA with BvfA-F and BvfA-L primers with Pfu Turbo DNA polymerase (Stratagene, La Jolla, CA) and cloned into HincII-digested pBBR1MCS4 (25).
(iii) pBBR1-KGFPbvfA.
A 546-bp fragment containing the bvfA promoter region (pbvfA) was amplified from B. suis 1330 genomic DNA with the PSKU and PSBL primers, which respectively introduced KpnI and BamHI site ends of the fragment. This fragment was first cloned into pGEM-T (Promega, Madison, WI) and then subcloned into pBBR1-KGFP (24) on a KpnI/BamHI fragment, giving pBBR1-KGFPbvfA.
Tissue culture virulence models.
Three cell lines were used: the human monocyte-like cell line THP1, differentiated for 72 h in the presence of vitamin D3; the murine macrophage-like J774; and HeLa epithelial cells. The cells were cultivated and infected by a standard gentamicin protection assay as described previously (33). Inhibition of phagosome acidification with 100 nM bafilomycin (Sigma, St Louis, MO) was as described previously (37).
In vivo infection assay.
Two groups of 8-week-old female BALB/c mice were infected intraperitoneally with 2 x 105 CFU in 200 µl of phosphate-buffered saline. At 1, 2, 4, and 8 weeks postinfection, five mice were killed, spleens were harvested, and the bacterial load was determined by plating serial dilutions of spleen homogenates on BABSC plates supplemented with Brucella Selectavial antibiotics (MAST Diagnostics, Bootle, United Kingdom). Results are presented as geometric means ± 1 standard error.
FACS analysis.
To determine the effect of pH on bvfA and virB induction, bacteria were grown overnight at 37°C in an orbital shaker in modified minimal E medium (26) at pH 7.0, harvested by centrifugation, resuspended in E medium at pH 4.0 or 7.0, and then incubated further at 37°C to early exponential phase (optical density at 600 nm = 0.1). Bacteria were then harvested, resuspended in phosphate-buffered saline, and subjected to fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS) analysis with a FACScalibur using CELLQUEST software (Becton Dickinson, San Jose, CA) as described previously (22). For infection of J774 cells, bacteria were opsonized with a 1:100 dilution of mouse anti-B. suis serum and used at a multiplicity of infection of 100. At 3 h postinfection, monolayers were lysed and analyzed by FACS. Analysis by fluorescence microscopy was performed as described previously (19).
Statistical analysis.
Differences between the means of experimental groups were analyzed by using Student's t test (two tailed; equal variance). Differences were considered significant at P values of <0.05.

RESULTS
Identification of secreted YopP fusions.
In an attempt to detect effectors secreted by the VirB T4SS,
we developed a novel reporter system using random translational
fusions of
Brucella DNA to the
Yersinia enterocolitica yopP gene. Our strategy relies on the fact that the YopP reporter
will only induce apoptosis when secreted by the bacterium as
a fusion protein. In a preliminary experiment, we introduced
a plasmid expressing the full-length YopP protein into
B. suis 1330. The protein was synthesized by the resulting strain, but
it did not induce the death of the infected macrophages, thus
ruling out the possibility that it could be secreted directly
by
Brucella (data not shown). We then constructed a fusion library
by insertion of
B. suis 1330 partial digested DNA fragments
upstream a promoterless
yopP gene, and the recombinant plasmids
were electroporated in a wild-type strain of
B. suis 1330 expressing
green fluorescent protein (GFP) constitutively. A bank of 2,400
clones was individually inoculated to THP1 cells, and the intracellular
multiplication of the bacteria was verified by fluorescence
microscopy at 48 h postinfection (
23). Two clones which appeared
unable to multiply intracellularly, 17E5 and 3G1, were identified.
Their inability to multiply within THP1 was confirmed by viable
counting. Several possible reasons could explain the attenuation
of the two clones: the predicted induction of apoptosis, blocking
of the secretion of a virulence factor by the hybrid protein
(
27), or a negative effect on bacterial fitness caused by expression
of the YopP fusion. Using terminal deoxynucleotidyltransferase-mediated
dUTP-biotin nick end labeling (
17), the apoptotic level was
still <0.5%, either in uninfected cells or in cells infected
by the
B. suis 1330 strain. In contrast, the 3G1 clone induced
apoptosis, with approximately 10% of cells in an infected monolayer
showing terminal nuclei positive by deoxynucleotidyltransferase-mediated
dUTP-biotin nick end labeling. A similar result was obtained
for the 17E5 clone (data not shown). The insert contained in
the plasmid of each of the two clones was sequenced, and the
sequence was used for BLAST searches of the
Brucella melitensis 16 M and
B. suis 1330 genomes (
11,
34). The 17E5 insert contains
the
nirV gene, encoding a protein of unknown function, found
in a cluster of genes encoding proteins involved in the denitrification
process (
3). This clone was not characterized further. Analysis
of the 384-bp insert in clone 3G1 showed that
yopP was fused
to a gene (BMEI1366) encoding a hypothetical protein. With the
B. suis 1330 annotation of the identical nucleotide sequence,
this region is predicted to encode a protein on the complementary
strand (BR0567), which would be fused in the wrong sense to
yopP. As the gene fusion in the 3G1 clone encodes a chimerical
protein with conserved YopP function, we prefer the
B. melitensis annotation but we propose that the gene starts at the ATG at
bp 52 of BMEI1366 rather than the predicted TTG, giving a 322-bp
gene encoding a small basic protein of 111 amino acids with
a molecular weight of 14011 and a predicted pI of 9.0. The protein
is unique to
Brucella, since PSI-BLAST searches failed to demonstrate
any homology with any protein sequences in GenBank. Neither
conserved domains nor known functional motifs were detected.
The protein is most probably periplasmic, as it is predicted
to have a Sec-dependent signal sequence with a cleavage site
between residues 15 to 16 by the SignalP-2 program (
http://www.cbs.dtu.dk/services/SignalP-2.0/).
BMEI1366 is located on the larger of the two chromosomes and
is present in all the
Brucella species we have tested by Southern
blotting (data not shown), including the new marine isolates
(
7).
Interestingly, in our screening, the apoptosis induced by the 3G1 but not the 17E5 fusion was dependent on the presence of a functional VirB system, which led us to believe that this protein was a possible VirB effector. Analysis of the 3G1 fusion suggested the presence of only a Sec-dependent signal sequence; control experiments, where YopP was delivered to the periplasm with an unrelated Sec-dependent signal sequence, also showed similar VirB-dependent induction of apoptosis, suggesting that this could be a nonspecific phenomenon (data not shown). However, this study has permitted the identification and characterization of a novel virulence factor, which we named BvfA, for Brucella virulence factor A.
B. suis bvfA is required for intracellular multiplication.
A null mutant (strain 1330bvfA::kan) (Table 1) was constructed in B. suis by allelic replacement (Fig. 1). The virulence of this strain was compared to that of the wild type and of the mutant transformed with plasmid pBBR1-BvfA, which carries the wild-type gene. The number of intracellular bacteria recovered 2 h and 5 h postinfection displayed no significant difference between the wild type and bvfA mutant, indicating that bvfA does not have any apparent role during invasion or resisting early macrophage killing. However, the bvfA mutant demonstrated an attenuated phenotype in both THP1, J774, and HeLa cells, with a significant reduction of intracellular multiplication at 24 h and 48 h postinfection (Fig. 2). The behavior was similar to that of a virB mutant (33). The presence of pBBR1-BvfA in the bvfA mutant fully restored the virulence of the mutant in the three cell lines (Fig. 2A and data not shown).
B suis bvfA mutants are attenuated in mice.
We used the murine model of brucellosis to assess the role of
BvfA in vivo, infecting mice intraperitoneally with 2
x 10
5 CFU of the
B. suis wild type or the
bvfA mutant. No significant
difference was detected between spleen counts of the wild type
and the mutant during the first 2 weeks of infection (Fig.
3,
left). However, at 4 weeks and 8 weeks postinfection, the numbers
of CFU recovered from the spleens of mice infected with
bvfA mutant were 1.7- and 3.5-log lower than those of the wild-type
strain, respectively. The mutant was rapidly cleared from spleens,
while the wild type persisted at high levels, showing that BvfA
is required for full virulence. Analysis of spleen weights showed
less splenomegaly in mice infected with the
bvfA mutant between
2 and 8 weeks (Fig.
3, right). Attempts to complement the mutant
were ambiguous due to plasmid instability in mice, a phenomenon
previously encountered with the pBBR1-MCS4 plasmids (R. M. Roop
II, personal communication).
The bvfA promoter is induced intracellularly.
We have recently shown that the
B. suis virB operon is induced
in acidic minimal medium or by phagosome acidification after
uptake by mammalian cells (
5,
6).
B. suis 1330 was electroporated
with plasmid pBBR1-KGFP
bvfA and pBBR1-KGFP
virB, which respectively
contain the predicted promoter-regulatory region for
bvfA and
the putative
virB promoter region cloned upstream of the
gfp gene in a differential fluorescence induction promoter trap
vector (
23,
40). Transcription was analyzed by fluorescence
microsocopy and FACS detecting GFP production. No fluorescence
was detected by microscopy with bacteria grown overnight in
tryptic soy broth (data not shown) and only very low levels
of fluorescence were detected by FACS, showing that neither
p
virB nor p
bvfA was induced. Induction of p
bvfA was observed
in acid minimal medium in a manner similar to that of p
virB (data not shown). To determine whether p
bvfA was induced within
cells, J774 macrophages were infected with bacteria grown overnight
in tryptic soy broth (
5). At 3 h postinfection, infected cells
were lysed, and supernatants containing
Brucella were subjected
to FACS (
5). Here again, there was a clear induction of expression
of GFP from both
pbvfA and p
virB, with levels of fluorescence
approaching that of the constitutive promoter control (Fig.
4, left panel).
Phagosome acidification has been shown to be essential for the
intracellular multiplication of
B. suis (
37), and acidification
is a stimulus required for
virB operon expression within the
phagosome (
5). We investigated its influence on p
bvfA induction.
Inhibiting phagosome acidification with the proton pump inhibitor
bafilomycin A1 blocked the induction of both p
bvfA and p
virB,
whereas the constitutive control remained fluorescent (Fig.
4, right). Analysis by fluorescence microscopy confirmed the
FACS data (data not shown). Transcription of p
bvfA was coregulated,
with that of
virB induced in acid minimal medium or by phagosome
acidification after uptake by macrophages.

DISCUSSION
BvfA is essential for
Brucella virulence in both in vitro and
in vivo virulence models. How it plays this role is not at all
clear; it is a small protein (a mass of 11 kDa is predicted
for the mature protein), with no homologues in GenBank and no
conserved domains or structural features (Prosite [
http://au.expasy.org/prosite/]).
The
B. suis genome has 3,388 open reading frames, of which 42%
are of unknown function, including 528 (15%) which are unique
to the genus
Brucella (
34). To date, >10% of the 180 attenuated
mutants reported for
Brucella are in genes of unknown function,
of which several are unique to
Brucella or to the

-
Proteobacteria (
10). A systematic study is required to assess the role of these
"orphans" in virulence.
The gene encoding BvfA (BMEI1366) is located on the large chromosome; neither of the genes surrounding bvfA, encoding a protease II-like protein and a Mn superoxide dismutase (SodA), have been reported to play a role in Brucella virulence. SodA has recently been shown to be required for full virulence of Mycobacterium tuberculosis (12). As the sodA gene downstream of bvfA is transcribed on the opposite strand and as the kanamycin-resistance cassette in 1330bvfA::kan does not interrupt the sodA coding sequence, we can exclude the possibility that the attenuation is due to a polar effect on sodA.
We found that bvfA is tightly regulated, with no expression in rich medium and induction in response to acid shock and within macrophages. While biochemical and differential fluorescence induction studies have identified a wide range of proteins induced by acid shock in vitro and genes induced intracellularly (10, 14, 29), only virB and bvfA have been shown to date to be required for virulence. The coregulation of bvfA with the virB operon, both in vitro and intracellularly, suggests that BvfA may also play a role in the establishment of the intracellular niche in which Brucella replicates.
BvfA was one of two potentially secreted proteins identified with a novel screen using the induction of apoptosis by translational fusions to the Yersinia YopP toxin as a readout. The first, which contained most of the NirV protein, appears to be secreted via the twin-arginine translocation system (J.-P. Lavigne and D. O'Callaghan, unpublished results). In the second, apoptosis was induced by YopP fused to the first 13 residues of BvfA. Induction of apoptosis by the strain expressing this fusion appeared to be dependent on a functional VirB system, suggesting at first glance that this protein was secreted via the T4SS. Analysis of this protein showed that the fusion had created a Sec-dependent signal sequence in the fusion, allowing YopP to be transported to the periplasm with the BvfA moiety cleaved by the signal peptidase. Control experiments, where YopP was delivered to the periplasm with other, unrelated Sec-dependent signal sequences, also showed VirB-dependent induction of apoptosis, suggesting nonspecific release of periplasmic YopP, rather than secretion directed by the fusion protein (data not shown). Nevertheless, how YopP is translocated from the bacterial periplasm to the cytoplasm of the infected cell remains to be elucidated. As most of the T4SS effector proteins studied have been shown to have a C-terminal signal (21, 30, 32, 39, 41), the secretion of the N-terminal YopP fusions argue against the conclusion that BvfA is a VirB effector. The C-terminal signal is thought to interact with the VirD4 coupling protein, which guides it to the secretion system; however, no VirD4 homologue in the Brucella genome has been identified. A similar situation exists in Bordetella pertussis, where the subunits of the pertussis toxin are transported to the periplasm by a Sec-dependent process where they assemble and are then secreted by the Ptl T4SS (8). As BvfA is predicted to be a periplasmic protein, it is not possible to rule out that it is part of a complex secreted from the periplasm by the Brucella T4SS. Further experiments are required to explore this hypothesis.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We thank C. Cazevieille for help with the apoptosis assays and
V. Jubier-Maurin for help with the FACS analysis.
This work was supported by the Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale and the European Community (QLK2-CT-2001-01200), la Région Languedoc-Roussillon, and the Université Montpellier I (BQR).

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale, U431, Faculté de Médecine, Avenue Kennedy, 30900 Nimes, France. Phone: 33-4-66-02-81-49. Fax: 33-4-66-02-81-48. E-mail:
david.ocallaghan{at}univ-montp1.fr.

Editor: D. L. Burns

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Infection and Immunity, September 2005, p. 5524-5529, Vol. 73, No. 9
0019-9567/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/IAI.73.9.5524-5529.2005
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