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Infection and Immunity, September 2006, p. 5140-5151, Vol. 74, No. 9
0019-9567/06/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/IAI.00449-06
Copyright © 2006, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Sofia Eriksson-Ygberg,1,
Fredrik Åslund,2 and
Mikael Rhen1
Microbiology and Tumor Biology Center, Karolinska Institutet, Nobels väg 16, 171 77 Stockholm, Sweden,1 European Patent Office, The Hague, The Netherlands2
Received 20 March 2006/ Returned for modification 26 April 2006/ Accepted 10 May 2006
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When selected oxidative substances, such as H2O2, are produced at an extracellular location, they may move through membrane structures and affect the redox status of cytosolic proteins and oxidize cysteine sulfhydryl side chains essential for protein folding, for enzymatic activity, or for chelating essential metal cofactors (3). The E. coli thioredoxin and glutathione/glutaredoxin systems include enzymes which shuttle redox potential from NADPH to cytosolic substrates, thereby providing a repair system for oxidized sulfhydryl groups in cytosolic proteins (3, 4, 50) (Fig. 1). Using thioredoxin 1 (TrxA) and thioredoxin 2 (TrxC), the thioredoxin system transfers reducing equivalents to DsbD, which is located in the cytoplasmic membrane, for transfer to the periplasmic space, thus providing the periplasmic oxidoreductase DsbC with electrons (27). DsbC, in turn, by reducing wrongly paired disulfides, plays an important role in ensuring correct protein folding of periplasmic proteins (42). Both thioredoxin 1 and thioredoxin 2 are in turn continuously reduced, mainly by thioredoxin reductase (TrxB), which derives its reducing equivalents from NADPH (3).
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FIG. 1. Schematic overview of the thioredoxin and glutathione/glutaredoxin systems in E. coli. Reduction and oxidation are indicated by solid and dashed arrows, respectively. The double arrows indicate disulfide bond isomerization. Members of the systems studied in this paper are cross-hatched. The diagram was adapted from the work of Aslund and Beckwith (3).
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-glutamylcysteine synthetase (GshA) and glutathione synthetase (GshB), glutathione oxidoreductase (Gor), glutaredoxin 1 (GrxA), glutaredoxin 2 (GrxB), and glutaredoxin 3 (GrxC) (3). For E. coli it has been shown that mutations in single components of the thioredoxin or glutathione/glutaredoxin system do not have profound effects on viability during standard in vitro growth conditions (46, 47). However, when trxA, trxC, and grxA are deleted simultaneously, the combination is lethal (50). Hence, the thioredoxin and glutathione/glutaredoxin pathways could be envisioned to be parallel mechanisms for transfer of electrons. Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium causes a systemic disease in mice that in many respects resembles human typhoid fever. In the murine infection, macrophages of the liver and spleen are believed to be a major niche for intracellular bacterial multiplication (11, 33). Furthermore, the inability of bacteria to survive and replicate in macrophages or macrophage-like cell lines in vitro also correlates with decreased virulence (20). Several studies have indicated that phagocyte production of oxidative and nitrosative substances is a main effector in the innate defense against infection of murine primary macrophages and macrophage-like cells (17, 55), as well as mice (34, 49), by S. enterica serovar Typhimurium.
The annotated S. enterica serovar Typhimurium LT2 genome contains homologues of the genes encoding the E. coli glutathione/glutaredoxin and thioredoxin systems (3, 35), which implies that the redox-shuffling pathways that operate in E. coli may also function in salmonellae to provide protection against oxidative stress. Indeed, inactivation of dsbA and srgA, a plasmid-encoded paralogue of dsbA, in S. enterica serovar Typhimurium has been shown to affect the expression of virulence-associated type III secretion and plasmid-encoded fimbriae (8, 36). Yet the role of the thioredoxin and glutathione/glutaredoxin pathways, which provide the periplasmic DsbA and SrgA oxidoreductases with reducing capacity, in the fitness and virulence of S. enterica serovar Typhimurium has not been evaluated.
In this study we deleted individual genes coding for components of the thioredoxin pathway (trxA, encoding thioredoxin 1; trxC, encoding thioredoxin 2; trxB, encoding thioredoxin reductase),
-glutamylcysteine synthetase (gshA), glutaredoxin 1 (grxA), and the periplasmic oxidoreductase DsbC (dsbC). Mutants were subsequently probed for their contributions of the genes to the in vitro and in vivo fitness and virulence of S. enterica serovar Typhimurium in epithelial MDCK cells, murine macrophage-like J774-A.1 cells, and BALB/c mice. The results define a demarcation in the biological functions of the two pathways in S. enterica serovar Typhimurium. Mutational depletion of bacterial glutathione, but not mutational depletion of glutathione reductase, resulted in sensitization to oxidative stress in vitro and in a slight attenuation of virulence. Depletion of thioredoxin 1, in turn, was specifically associated with decreased intracellular replication in both epithelial and macrophage-like cells and with drastically decreased virulence in BALB/c mice. Furthermore, our results clearly imply that the catalytic redox activity of thioredoxin 1 contributes to bacterial virulence.
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Generation of mutants.
The open reading frames of the trxA, trxB, trxC, gshA, grxA, and dsbC genes were replaced by a kanamycin resistance cassette using the recombinase-assisted allelic replacement technology described by Datsenko and Wanner (16). Briefly, the kanamycin resistance cassette was PCR amplified from plasmid pKD3 using primers with 40- to 50-mer nucleotide extensions homologous to the 5' and 3' ends of the open reading frames to be deleted. The primers were obtained from Invitrogen and are described in Table 1. The PCR products were transferred to wild-type bacteria by electroporation according to the instructions provided by the manufacturer of the electroporation cuvettes (Bio-Rad). Allelic replacement was assisted and enhanced by the phage
Red recombinase expressed in trans, and undesired recombination activity was prevented by expression of the
Red recombinase from an arabinose-inducible promoter (16). Additionally, to exclude any possible secondary mutations created by recombinase activity, all mutations were transferred to a clean background using P22 int transduction (48). All mutants were verified by PCR amplification with one primer defining the replacement cassette (16) and another primer defining the adjacent retained genomic sequence, as shown in Table 2. All primers were designed using the S. enterica serovar Typhimurium LT2 whole-genome sequence annotation from Washington University, St. Louis, MO, and were purchased from Gibco. The kanamycin resistance cassette contains recognition sequences for the FLP recombinase and can therefore be easily by eliminated by using a helper plasmid expressing the FLP recombinase. Excision of the resistance gene left only a short (85-bp) oligonucleotide "scar" and thus generated a nonpolar mutation (16). A nonpolar trxA mutant, designated
trxA to distinguish it from the trxA::Km mutant, was generated using this method, and in addition, P22 int transduction (48) of
trxA was used to generate a
trxA trxC::Km double mutant.
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TABLE 1. Primers used for mutagenesis
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TABLE 2. Gene-specific primers for PCR controls
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In vitro cell culture infection model. J774-A.1 cells (TIB 67; American Type Culture Collection, Rockville, MD) and MDCK cells (American Type Culture Collection, Rockville, MD) were cultivated in RPMI and Dulbecco modified Eagle medium (Gibco, Paisley, United Kingdom), respectively. The medium was supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum (Gibco, Paisley, United Kingdom), L-glutamine (final concentration, 10 mM), HEPES (final concentration, 10 mM), and gentamicin (final concentration, 10 µg/ml). L-Glutamine, HEPES, and gentamicin were all obtained from Sigma, St. Louis, MO.
The bacteria used for infection of J774-A.1 cells were grown on LB agar plates overnight at 37°C to ensure that the phenotype was noninvasive (6). Prior to infection bacteria were suspended in phosphate-buffered saline and opsonized in vitro for 30 min at 37°C using 10% fresh preimmune serum from BALB/c mice. Next, bacteria were diluted in cell culture medium supplemented only with HEPES (final concentration, 10 mM) and subsequently were seeded on semiconfluent cells grown in 24-well plates.
To obtain phenotypically invasive bacteria for infection of MDCK cells, cultures were grown overnight (16 to 18 h at 37°C) in LB broth, diluted 1:10 in 4 ml of fresh medium, and grown in closed 15-ml Falcon tubes at 37°C on a Brunswick roller incubator for 2 h (6). Next, the bacteria were diluted directly in HEPES-supplemented cell culture medium. Cells were infected at a multiplicity of infection of 20:1 and centrifuged for 5 min at 1,500 rpm to facilitate infection. One hour postinfection, medium containing gentamicin at a concentration of 50 µg/ml was added, and the cells were incubated for 45 min to kill the extracellular bacteria. For continued incubation, the killing medium was replaced by maintenance medium containing 10 µg/ml of gentamicin. At indicated time points, cells were lysed either by hypotonic lysis (J774-A.1 cells) or by using a solution of freshly prepared 0.5% sodium deoxycholate in phosphate-buffered saline (MDCK cells), and the number of intracellular bacteria was determined based on the CFU counts of viable bacteria (17).
Apoptosis assay.
Cells infected with wild-type or the
trxA mutant bacteria were analyzed for induction of apoptosis 16 h postinfection using an ELISAPLUS cell death detection kit obtained from Roche. This assay was based on determination of enrichment of histone-associated DNA fragments in the cytoplasm. All reagents required were supplied with the kit, and the assay was performed according to the manufacturer's instructions.
Immunoblotting. LB medium cultures of trxA mutants complemented with the different redox variants of thioredoxin 1 were grown to the logarithmic phase at 37°C with shaking. A suspension containing 5 x 105 bacteria was analyzed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (29), followed by immunoblotting with rabbit anti-thioredoxin 1 or anti-chloramphenicol acetyltransferase serum (catalogue no. T0803 and C-9336, respectively; Sigma). Bound antibody was detected using a peroxidase-conjugated anti-mouse/rabbit secondary antibody (Roche) and a chemoluminescence detection kit (Roche). The blocking solution used was provided with the kit, and all procedures following the transfer to a Hybond P polyvinylidene difluoride membrane (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech) were carried out according to the descriptions provided by the manufacturer of the chemoluminescence detection kit. The Kaleidoscope prestained standard from Bio-Rad was used as a molecular mass marker.
Mouse infection. In vivo competition experiments were carried out using 6- to 8-week-old female BALB/c mice (Taconic, Denmark). The mice were infected intraperitoneally with mutant and wild-type bacteria at a ratio of 1:1 (17). The total load was adjusted to 104 bacteria per mouse. Three or four mice from each group were sacrificed at 24 h and 72 h postinfection. The mutant/wild-type ratios in livers and spleens were determined by comparing the CFU counts of viable bacteria. Mutants were distinguished from wild-type bacteria either on the basis of the kanamycin resistance conferred by the replacement cassette or on the basis of the expression of tetracycline resistance coded for by a Tn10 element that was inserted into the virulence plasmid pSLT and was neutral for virulence (5). In competition experiments with trxA mutants complemented with wild-type thioredoxin 1 or a catalytically inactive variant, the two mutants were distinguished on the basis of the kanamycin resistance of the trxA::Km mutant. In addition, samples were plated on LB agar plates supplemented with chloramphenicol or kanamycin and chloramphenicol to ensure that the complementing plasmids were retained throughout the experiment. Mice were housed at Microbiology and Tumor Biology Center, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden, under normal conditions in accordance with both institutional and national guidelines.
Statistical analysis. Data from cell culture experiments were analyzed by a one-way analysis of variance. This analysis indicated differences between the groups with a P value of <0.0001 in all experiments except the phagocytosis assay with J774-A.1 cells and the invasion assay with MDCK cells, which gave P values of <0.001 and <0.05, respectively. The analysis of variance was followed by a two-sided t test to determine the significance of differences between the different groups. Data from the pPIR-A segregation experiment and the mouse experiments were analyzed by a two-sided t test. All P values from the t test analysis are indicated below. Before the t test was performed, all data from the mouse experiments were transformed to log10 values.
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-glutamylcysteine synthetase (gshA), which is involved in glutathione synthesis, and glutaredoxin 1 (grxA). All mutants were generated in the S. enterica serovar Typhimurium ATCC 14028 background using recombinase-assisted allelic replacement technology (16). Finally, as the rho gene is located transcriptionally downstream of trxA and thus is potentially in expressional connection with trxA, we also generated a nonpolar mutation by deleting the kanamycin resistance cassette from the original trxA mutant. To distinguish between the different trxA mutants, the nonpolar mutant is referred to below as
trxA, and the other mutant is referred to as trxA::Km. The nonpolar
trxA mutant was subsequently used to generate a
trxA trxC::Km double mutant. Details concerning mutagenesis are described in Materials and Methods. Mutational inactivation of trxA, trxB, trxC, grxA, or dsbC does not affect growth in vitro. Apart from being induced upon stress, both the thioredoxins and glutathione/glutaredoxins also have housekeeping functions. One example, emphasizing the necessity to screen mutants depleted of components of these systems for growth defects, is the role of thioredoxins in the reduction of ribonucleotide reductase (1). In order to probe the mutants for potential general growth defects, wild-type and mutant ATCC 14028 strains were grown in rich medium (LB medium) and in a liquid pH 5.8 Casamino Acids-supplemented minimal medium (MM5.8). The latter growth medium was designed to mimic the intravacuolar environment in which Salmonella replicates during infection of macrophages (26) and thus was a suitable control for the cell infection experiments described below. In these assays all mutants except the gshA mutant, which had a slightly lower growth rate in MM5.8, grew with the same kinetics as the parental wild-type strain (data not shown). Additionally, the wild type and all mutants grew in M9 minimal medium (data not shown), indicating that the mutations did not generate any auxotrophies.
Nevertheless, when the mutants competed against the wild type, a small but significant growth defect was discovered for the gshA mutant in LB medium. After 16 h of incubation at 37°C, the mutant/wild-type ratio decreased from 1.0 to 0.6 (n = 3; P < 0.05). For comparison, when the trxA::Km mutant competed against the wild type, the mean ratio remained the same (1.1 at both the zero time point and after 16 h of incubation; n = 3; P > 0.05).
Sensitivity to radical stress in vitro. We began by evaluating the role of the thioredoxin and glutathione/glutaredoxin systems in S. enterica serovar Typhimurium by screening mutant and wild-type bacteria for differences in the MIC of hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), DEM, paraquat, or the nitric oxide donor compound GSNO. Bacteria were grown in LB medium or MM5.8 to either the late logarithmic or stationary phase before they were exposed to the different compounds. Surprisingly, in these analyses all of the mutants except the gshA mutant exhibited overall maintained resistance to the substances in the concentration range tested, and the trxA::Km mutant even exhibited moderately increased resistance to GSNO when it was grown in MM5.8 (Table 3). However, the MIC of DEM, paraquat, and H2O2 for the gshA mutant were decreased when the bacteria were grown in MM5.8.
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TABLE 3. MIC of oxidative and nitrosative substances
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In these experiments, the mutants exhibited only minor alterations in the invasion efficacy compared to the invasion efficacy of the wild type (Fig. 2A). While the small reductions in invasion efficacy exhibited by the
trxA and trxB::Km mutants were statistically significant, considering the magnitude of the decreases, they are unlikely to be biologically relevant. In correlation with these data, we did not detect any significant differences between mutant and wild-type bacteria in expression or secretion of SPI1 effector proteins, as determined by a sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis analysis of culture supernatants from phenotypically invasive bacteria (data not shown). When we compared the growth yields, the trxB and dsbC mutants exhibited minor but statistically significant reductions in growth. The trxA::Km mutant, however, exhibited a more pronounced decrease in growth than the wild type exhibited (Fig. 2B). As indicated above, the genome sequence of S. enterica serovar Typhimurium LT2 includes a reading frame just downstream of trxA. In order to exclude any polar effects of the kanamycin resistance replacement cassette, this cassette was excised to create a nonpolar trxA deletion. In invasion and intracellular replication experiments the nonpolar
trxA mutant behaved like the original trxA::Km mutant, exhibiting an almost identical, statistically significant reduction in the growth yield (Fig. 2A and B).
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FIG. 2. Invasion by (A) and growth of (B) the wild type and the different mutants of S. enterica serovar Typhimurium in MDCK cells. MDCK cells were infected with phenotypically invasive bacteria. At 1 h postinfection, cells were treated with gentamicin (50 µg/ml) for 45 min to kill extracellular bacteria. At 2 h and 16 h postinfection cells were lysed in order to measure invasion efficacy (CFU at 2 h/CFU seeded on the cells) and growth yields (CFU at 16 h/CFU at 2 h), respectively. All values were normalized to the wild-type value. The error bars indicate standard deviations (n 3). One asterisk indicates that the P value is <0.05, two asterisks indicate that the P value is <0.001, and three asterisks indicate that the P value is <0.0001, as determined by the Student t test.
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FIG. 3. Efficacy of phagocytosis (A) and intracellular proliferation (B) of wild-type and mutant S. enterica serovar Typhimurium bacteria in J774-A.1 macrophage-like cells. Cells were infected with phenotypically noninvasive bacteria opsonized with 10% preimmune mouse sera. At 1 h postinfection, cells were treated with gentamicin (50 µg/ml) for 45 min to kill the extracellular bacteria. At 2 h and 16 h postinfection cells were lysed in order to measure phagocytosis efficacy (CFU at 2 h/CFU seeded on the cells) and growth yields (CFU at 16 h/CFU at 2 h), respectively. All values were normalized to the wild-type value. The error bars indicate standard deviations (n 3). One asterisk indicates that the P value is <0.05, and three asterisks indicate that the P value is <0.0001, as determined by the Student t test.
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trxA trxC::Km double mutant to evaluate whether the increase in the growth yield associated with the trxC mutation could compensate for the growth defect of a trxA mutant. However, the growth yield of the
trxA trxC::Km double mutant was similar to that of the trxA single mutants (Fig. 3A and B). Wild-type and trxA mutant bacteria do not differ in apoptotic potential. Phenotypically invasive S. enterica serovar Typhimurium is known to cause a relatively rapid SPI1-dependent apoptotic response in infected monocytic cells (37). Although phenotypically noninvasive bacteria were used for infection of J774.A-1 cells, we wanted to ensure that the decreased growth yields obtained with the trxA mutants were not a consequence of increased bacterium-mediated cytotoxicity. To settle this issue, both J774.A-1 and MDCK cells were infected with wild-type and thioredoxin 1-deficient S. enterica serovar Typhimurium, and enrichment of DNA-histone complexes in the cytosol of infected cells was used as a readout of apoptosis 16 h postinfection. In this analysis, some apoptosis was induced in infected cells compared to noninfected controls. However, there was no significant difference between cells infected with wild-type bacteria and cells infected with trxA::Km mutant bacteria (Fig. 4A and B).
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FIG. 4. Induction of apoptosis by wild-type and trxA mutant bacteria in J774-A.1 and MDCK cells. Enrichment of DNA-histone complexes in the cytosol of infected cells, as measured by an ELISA, was used as an indication of apoptosis. The enrichment factor was calculated as follows: absorbance of the sample/absorbance of the uninfected cells. Purified DNA-histone complexes provided with the ELISA kit were used as the positive control. A significantly longer incubation time with the ELISA substrate was required in panel B than in panel A before color development was detected. This resulted in a more intense color for the positive control in panel B than in panel A and is the explanation for the apparently large difference in enrichment factor between the positive control in panel A and panel B. The error bars indicate standard deviations (n = 3). One asterisk indicates that the P value is <0.05, two asterisks indicate that the P value is <0.001, and three asterisks indicate that the P value is <0.0001, as determined by the Student t test.
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Thus, J774-A.1 cells were infected with wild-type or trxA::Km mutant bacteria carrying the pPIR-A plasmid. At 16 h postinfection bacteria were recovered from the cells and used to infect a new set of cells without passage of the bacteria on ordinary growth medium, and bacteria were recovered after another 16 h of incubation to obtain the apparent 32-h. The bacterial growth yields were determined by comparing the CFU counts at 2 and 16 h. In parallel, the percentages of viable ampicillin-resistant bacteria were determined for the various samples. In this assay, the growth index for the wild-type strain was significantly higher that that for the trxA::Km mutant (Fig. 5A), as anticipated from the growth experiment with macrophage-like J774-A.1 cells described above (Fig. 3B). When the proportion of ampicillin resistance was measured, the pPIR-A plasmid segregated more efficiently in wild-type bacteria than in the trxA::Km mutant (Fig. 5B). This implied that the lower intracellular growth yield of the trxA::Km mutant was due at least in part to a slower intracellular generation time.
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FIG. 5. Intracellular replication efficacy of S. enterica serovar Typhimurium wild type and trxA mutant in macrophage-like J774-A.1 cells, as measured by segregation of the temperature-sensitive plasmid pPIR-A. Growth yields (A) and percentage of viable ampicillin-resistant bacteria (B) were determined. In panel A, the value for the trxA mutant was normalized to the wild-type value at each time point. The error bars indicate standard deviations (n 3). One asterisk indicates that the P value is <0.05, two asterisks indicate that the P value is <0.001, and three asterisks indicate that the P value is <0.0001, as determined by the Student t test.
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FIG. 6. In vivo fitness and virulence of the various mutants compared to wild-type S. enterica serovar Typhimurium. BALB/c mice were infected intraperitoneally with mixtures of wild-type and mutant bacteria at a 1:1 ratio (the total dose was 104 bacteria per mouse). Mice were sacrificed on day 1 (24 h) and day 3 (72 h) postinfection, and the proportions of wild-type and mutant bacteria in the livers (A) and spleens (B) were determined by CFU counts in homogenized tissues. The error bars indicate standard deviations (n = 3). Statistical significance was observed only for the small decrease in the mutant/wild-type ratio for the gshA mutant and for the more pronounced decrease for the trxA::Km mutant (P < 0.05, as determined by the Student t test).
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trxA mutant by determining the mutant/wild-type ratio in BALB/c mice. To distinguish between mutant and wild-type bacteria, the wild type was tagged with a neutral Tn10 insertion (5). There was also a pronounced decrease in the mutant/wild-type ratio when the nonpolar mutant was used, with less than 1% of the mutant recovered in relation to the Tn10-tagged wild type at 72 h postinfection (data not shown). Finally, as inactivation of trxC resulted in increased bacterial replication in murine macrophage-like J774-A.1 cells, we also determined the ratio of the
trxA trxC::Km double mutant to the wild-type strain in BALB/c mice. In these experiments, however, the mutant/wild-type ratio was below the detection limit at 72 h postinfection (data not shown). Thus, thioredoxin 1 does contribute to the in vivo virulence of S. enterica serovar Typhimurium in the mouse infection model. The contribution to intracellular growth and in vivo virulence by thioredoxin 1 depends on its catalytic redox activity. Thioredoxin 1 is an evolutionarily conserved reductase, in which the catalytic active site is characterized by a Cys-X-X-Cys motif. In addition, recent observations defined a protein chaperone function for thioredoxin 1 that is not related to its catalytic activity (25). As shown by the data in Table 3 and Fig. 2 and 3, the sustained in vitro tolerance to oxidative substances of the trxA::Km mutant did not correlate with the observed intracellular replication defect. We therefore wanted to establish to what degree the intracellular replication depended on the redox activity of thioredoxin 1. To study this, we used a collection of trxA constructs expressing either wild-type E. coli K-12 thioredoxin 1 or thioredoxin 1 catalytic site mutants with decreased reducing capabilities or with a complete lack of redox activity due to single amino acid substitutions (Fig. 7A). The choice of this series of constructs was justified by the fact that the primary structures of the E. coli K-12 and S. enterica serovar Typhimurium LT2 thioredoxin 1 proteins are identical (7, 35).
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FIG. 7. Correlation between the reductivity of thioredoxin 1 and the ability to complement a trxA mutant. (A) Catalytic motifs and reduction potentials of the different constructs. (B) Immunoblotting of trxA mutants expressing either of the catalytic variants in trans with anti-TrxA and anti-CAT as an internal control showed that there was equal expression of the different variants. (C) J774-A.1 cells were infected with thioredoxin 1-deficient bacteria complemented with the different redox variants, and the abilities of these constructs to complement the growth defect were analyzed at 16 h postinfection. The data obtained for pFA3, pFA5, pFA6, and pFA7 were used in a regression analysis (D), which showed that there was a straight correlation between redox potential and the ability to complement (P < 0.0001). All values in panel C were normalized to the wild-type value. The error bars indicate standard deviations (n 3). Three asterisks indicate that the P value is <0.0001, as determined by the Student t test.
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trxA mutant bacteria complemented with the different variants were analyzed. The vectors that expressed the thioredoxin 1 variants also encoded chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT), which functioned as an internal control in this analysis. Immunoblotting experiments for thioredoxin 1 and CAT verified that the levels of thioredoxin 1 expressed by the various constructs were comparable (Fig. 7B).
Having eliminated the possibility that there were any differences in expression of the different variants of thioredoxin 1, we next studied the effects of complementation of
trxA mutant bacteria with the thioredoxin 1 variants during infection of J774-A.1 cells. In this assay complementation with pFA3, which codes for wild-type thioredoxin 1, completely restored the intracellular replication of the
trxA mutant, while pFA8, which codes for the noncatalytic variant, did not exhibit any complementation ability (Fig. 7C). Interestingly, for the remaining catalytically active variants of thioredoxin 1, there appeared to be a correlation between redox potential and the degree of complementation. In fact, the growth yield for the strain complemented with the least reducing variant of thioredoxin 1, coded for by pFA5, was lower than the growth yield obtained with the empty cloning vector pBAD33 (Fig. 7C). A regression analysis showed that there was a straight correlation between redox potential and complementation ability (Fig. 7D).
Next, we wanted to establish whether the decreased in vivo virulence of the trxA mutants also depended on the redox activity of thioredoxin 1. Thus, BALB/c mice were infected intraperitoneally with a mixture of the
trxA mutant complemented with pFA3 (wild-type trxA) and the trxA::Km mutant complemented with pFA8 (catalytically inactive trxA) or a mixture of both
trxA and trxA::Km complemented with pFA8 at a 1:1 ratio; the total dose was 104 bacteria per mouse. To distinguish between the two trxA mutants and to ensure that the complementing plasmids were retained at a high efficiency, samples were plated on ordinary LB agar plates and on plates supplemented with kanamycin, chloramphenicol, or kanamycin and chloramphenicol. In these experiments the pFA8/pFA3 ratio decreased continuously from day 0 to day 3 in both the liver and the spleen (Fig. 8A and B), whereas the pFA8/pFA8 ratio remained fairly constant (Fig. 8C and D). This indicated that in vivo bacterial virulence at least partially depended on the redox activity of thioredoxin 1.
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FIG. 8. In vivo virulence depends on the redox activity of thioredoxin 1. BALB/c mice were infected intraperitoneally with mixtures of either the trxA mutant complemented with pFA3 (wild-type trxA) and the trxA::Km mutant complemented with pFA8 (catalytically inactive trxA) or both the trxA and trxA::Km mutants complemented with pFA8 at a 1:1 ratio (the total dose was 104 bacteria per mouse). Mice were sacrificed on day 1 (24 h) and day 3 (72 h) postinfection, and the proportions of pFA8- and pFA3-containing bacteria in the livers (A and C) and spleens (B and D) were determined by CFU counts in homogenized tissues. The error bars indicate standard deviations (n = 4). One asterisk indicates that the P value is <0.05, and two asterisks indicate that the P value is <0.001, as determined by the Student t test.
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The species S. enterica includes a number of serovariants that are facultative intracellular parasites and that characteristically target phagocytic cells. Two major defense mechanisms expressed by professional phagocytes are the production of reactive oxygen and nitrogen species (33, 54, 55). Hence, it is not surprising that virulent S. enterica serovar Typhimurium has been found to express genes that mediate an antioxidative defense. SoxS is known to mediate tolerance to paraquat in vitro (19), whereas expression of the superoxide dismutase SodCI is induced upon infection of macrophage-like cells and is required for virulence in mice (18, 53). When replicating in phagocytic cells, S. enterica serovar Typhimurium is reported to exclude the phagocyte NADPH oxidase and the inducible nitric oxide synthase from the Salmonella-containing vacuole in an SPI2-dependent manner (12, 56). Moreover, the SPI2 TTSS has been reported to depend on the periplasmic oxidoreductase DsbA for proper function (36). Thus, one would expect active participation of the thioredoxin and glutathione/glutaredoxin systems in the protection of salmonellae against oxidative damage, in inappropriate formation of disulfide bonds, and, due to their function as electron donors, in the pathway for disulfide bond isomerization in the periplasm, as well as in the expression of complex surface-associated virulence factors, such as the type III secretion systems (36).
When sensitization of trxA, trxB, trxC, gshA, grxA, and dsbC mutants of S. enterica serovar Typhimurium to oxidative and nitric oxide donor substances in vitro was studied, increased sensitivity to oxidative substances was observed only for the gshA mutant deficient in
-glutamylcysteine synthetase (Table 3). During infection of epithelial MDCK cells, small but statistically significant decreases in internalization were observed for the
trxA and trxB mutants (Fig. 2A). In parallel, small but statistically significant decreases in intracellular replication were observed for the trxB and trxC mutants. However, the decrease in replication efficacy was small compared to that of the wild-type strain. In contrast, there was a more pronounced and significant decrease in the replication efficacy of the trxA mutants in MDCK cells (Fig. 2B).
When mutants were probed for bacterial uptake and replication in macrophage-like J774-A.1 cells, small but statistically significant decreases in initial uptake or early survival were observed for the trxA, trxB, trxC, gshA, and grxA mutants (Fig. 3A). The trxA mutants showed a statistically significant decrease in intracellular growth, whereas the trxB mutant displayed a small decrease in intracellular replication, comparable to its behavior in MDCK cells (Fig. 3B). Surprisingly, significant increases in replication of the trxC, dsbC, and grxA mutants inside murine macrophage-like J774-A.1 cells were observed (Fig. 3B). Subsequent experiments in which the replication efficacies of wild-type and trxA::Km bacteria in murine macrophage-like J774-A.1 cells were compared showed that the decreased yield of trxA::Km mutant bacteria resulted at least in part from a significantly lower intracellular replication rate. Additionally, when the fitness of the various mutants in BALB/c mice was studied, we observed a small decrease in the virulence of the gshA mutant, whereas there were pronounced degrees of attenuation only for the trxA mutants. In this respect, the behavior of the trxA mutants resembled that of purE mutants of S. enterica serovar Typhimurium. The replication of pur mutants is affected in epithelial MDCK cells (30) and murine macrophage-like J774-A.1 cells (10), as well as in BALB/c mice (43).
Thioredoxin 1 is an evolutionarily conserved protein, and the primary structures of the E. coli and S. enterica serovar Typhimurium LT2 proteins are identical and have a characteristic Cys-X-X-Cys motif that defines the catalytic site and the redox activity. Thioredoxin 1 was initially identified on the basis of its ability to provide redox equivalents for ribonucleotide reductases, which are enzymes that generate deoxyribonucleotides essential for bacterial DNA replication (1). In E. coli, thioredoxin 1 also maintains resistance to oxidative stress, which implies that the relatively strong reducing potential of this protein (E'0, 270 mV) also restores appropriate cytoplasmic disulfide status (3). However, at least two lines of evidence indicate that thioredoxin 1 has a function that does not rely on reduction of cysteines in target proteins. First, as reported by Kern et al. (25), E. coli thioredoxin 1 was found to have a protein chaperone function in vitro for denatured citrate synthetase, and this capacity was completely active even when an oxidized form of thioredoxin 1 was used (25). Second, by using a protein capture approach, 80 proteins were identified in E. coli that associated with thioredoxin 1, 4 of which are enzymes involved in detoxification and oxidative stress responses. Yet 20 of the proteins, including a manganese-dependent superoxide dismutase, did not have cysteines in their primary structure, which made them incapable of interacting with thioredoxin 1 through the formation of mixed disulfides (28). Thus, we found that it was necessary to establish whether the virulence-associated characteristics of thioredoxin 1 were connected to its catalytic activity. By using different redox variants of thioredoxin 1 in complementation assays, we showed that there is a clear correlation between redox activity and restoration of intracellular growth of the
trxA mutant in macrophage-like J774-A.1 cells. Wild-type thioredoxin 1 with an E'0 of 270 mV completely restored the intracellular replication efficacy of the
trxA mutant, while a catalytically inactive variant of thioredoxin 1 did not confer any complementation. In contrast, the variant with an E'0 of 195 mV, which was more oxidative, actually decreased the intracellular growth potential of the
trxA mutant. This implies that the replication efficacy of S. enterica serovar Typhimurium in macrophage-like J774-A.1 cells depends on the reductivity of thioredoxin 1. Likewise, complementation for virulence in BALB/c mice occurred when redox-active wild-type thioredoxin 1 was used but not when the catalytically inactive variant was used. These observations clearly showed that the redox activity of thioredoxin 1 does contribute to virulence.
In this context, the observed increased intracellular replication of the trxC, grxA, and dsbC mutants in macrophage-like J774-A.1 cells deserves some attention. It has been reported that inactivation of trxA in E. coli increases the expression of glutaredoxins, while inactivation of thioredoxins or glutaredoxins increases catalase activity (45, 57). Thus, compensatory cross-regulation between the thioredoxin and glutathione/glutaredoxin pathways could explain maintenance against oxidation- or nitrosation-mediated killing of the trxC, grxA, and dsbC mutants. However, the results of immunoblotting experiments did not suggest that there is any compensatory upregulation in the expression of thioredoxin 1 in the trxC, grxA, and dsbC mutants (data not shown). Therefore, considering the impact of redox-active thioredoxin 1 for intracellular replication, one could envision an alternative scenario in which thioredoxin 1, when there is a shortage of NADPH, competes with thioredoxin 2 and DsbC for reducing equivalents and that depletion of either thioredoxin 2 or DsbC leaves thioredoxin 1 with more catalytic capacity to promote intracellular replication. This suggestion is also consistent with the slightly decreased intracellular replication efficacy of the trxB mutant, since thioredoxin reductase shuffles redox equivalents from NADPH to thioredoxin 1 and thioredoxin 2 (Fig. 1), and with the observation that the increased intracellular replication of the trxC mutant does not occur with a
trxA trxC::Km double mutant. Furthermore, as both GshA and thioredoxin reductase use NADPH, a lack of the redox-consuming thioredoxin 1 could explain the observed small increase in GSNO tolerance of the trxA::Km mutant (Table 3).
To summarize, we showed that in S. enterica serovar Typhimurium thioredoxin 1 has a substantial effect on bacterial intracellular replication and virulence, yet this role of thioredoxin 1 does not correlate with tolerance to oxidative stress in vitro. In contrast, in vitro tolerance to oxidative stress strongly depends on the synthesis of glutathione.
E.B. and S.E.-Y. contributed equally to this work. ![]()
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