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Infection and Immunity, December 2008, p. 5760-5767, Vol. 76, No. 12
0019-9567/08/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/IAI.00618-08
Copyright © 2008, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
,
David K. Halladin,
Brian J. Haugen, and
Rodney A. Welch*
Department of Medical Microbiology and Immunology, University of Wisconsin-Madison, 1300 University Avenue, Madison, Wisconsin 53706
Received 21 May 2008/ Returned for modification 18 June 2008/ Accepted 29 September 2008
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The transition from residence in the gastrointestinal tract, where uropathogenic Escherichia coli (UPEC) transiently resides, to the urinary tract represents a significant change in environment. While the gastrointestinal tract is densely populated with many different species of bacteria, the bladder is normally a sterile environment yet one that presents significant challenges to bacterial growth. In addition to the cleansing flow of urine, numerous innate and acquired immune factors challenge the growth of UPEC in the urinary tract. The host defense involves phagocytic attack, antimicrobial peptides, complement lytic and opsonizing factors, and reactive oxygen and nitrogen species. In addition, the urinary tract as reflected in urine is limited in nutrients common to the intestinal tract, especially neutral sugars and iron (8). We hypothesize that UPEC adapted to take advantage of nutrients present in urine to more effectively colonize the urinary tract than the typical fecal E. coli strains, which rarely cause symptomatic UTIs.
From the standpoint of E. coli nutrition, urine is a dilute mixture of amino acids and small peptides, quite similar to tryptone broth with the notable exception of the abundance of urea in urine, a molecule that E. coli cannot utilize (8). The growth of E. coli in tryptone broth cultures is well characterized. Growing cells preferentially and sequentially utilize serine and then aspartate while secreting acetate. Once these two amino acids are depleted, cells then import and catabolize acetate and tryptophan, followed by alanine, glutamine, and threonine (1, 9, 40, 53, 54). This order of nutrient preference holds true for E. coli grown in broth cultures (9, 40, 53) as well as on semisolid motility agar (1, 54). UPEC growing in the urinary tract may encounter an environment more closely resembling that of a chemostat than that of a closed laboratory system. The production of urine from the kidneys provides a continuous supply of a preferred nutrient, such as serine, and hypothetically leads to production of the excreted product, acetate. One potential nutrient encountered by UPEC is D-serine, which is one of the most abundant amino acids found in human urine at concentrations between 3 and 115 µg/ml. The ratio of D- to L-serine enantomers in urine varies from human to human, but D-serine can range from as little as 18% to as much as 74% of the total serine (20). Serine can be catabolized into ammonia and pyruvate through enantomer-specific deaminases. SdaA and SdaB catabolize L-serine (48, 49), while DsdA will degrade D-serine (36).
Previous work in our laboratory focused on serine metabolism of extraintestinal pathogenic E. coli, using the urosepsis UPEC isolate, CFT073 (3, 19, 33, 44). We determined that approximately 85% of UPEC pyelonephritis and urosepsis isolates carry an intact D-serine deaminase operon (dsdCXA) (33). We have also observed that nearly all isolates of the common extraintestinal E. coli O18:K1:H7 pathotype possess two copies of the D-serine deaminase locus (33). This is in stark contrast to the roughly 5% of diarrheal isolates that are able to utilize D-serine (33). CFT073 with a dsdA mutation is at a competitive advantage relative to wild-type CFT073 in the murine model of UTI (44). Further studies demonstrate that multiple CFT073 mutants able to accumulate D-serine intracellularly are at a competitive advantage in the urinary tract (4). A CFT073 dsdA sdaA sdaB strain unable to utilize either enantiomer of serine is at a competitive disadvantage in the murine model (4). This suggests there is a role for serine as a key nutrient in vivo. We propose that this role is tied to acetate metabolism because serine is preferentially consumed by E. coli in a mixture of amino acids and can be metabolized to acetyl phosphate and then secreted as acetate (53).
Acetate metabolism is associated with expression of genes involved in pathogenesis (12, 15, 24, 25, 30, 38, 46, 53). Much interest involves the acetyl phosphate intermediary generated by the conversion of acetyl coenzyme A (acetyl-CoA) to acetyl phosphate by Pta (25, 30, 41, 46, 51, 53). Acetyl phosphate is degraded to acetate by AckA and secreted (25, 51, 53). Acs is used to consume the secreted acetate when nutrients become depleted (26, 53). Acetyl phosphate can serve as a phosphate donor to numerous two-component regulatory systems (15, 25, 41, 46, 51). In E. coli K-12, acetyl phosphate influences cell division (38, 39, 53), motility (15), type I fimbriae, biofilm formation (41), and some forms of the periplasmic stress response (15, 25, 38). We hypothesize that acetyl phosphate plays a role in wild-type colonization of the urinary tract and that ackA and pta mutants will lead to mouse urinary tract colonization defects.
In this study, we set out to determine if acetate metabolism has a fitness role for UPEC colonization and pathogenesis. L-Serine is preferentially consumed in tryptone broth and leads to acetogenic metabolism, but the ability to secrete acetate following D-serine catabolism has not been previously shown (1, 38, 53, 54). We demonstrate that CFT073 will upregulate the genes associated with acetate metabolism, including ackA, pta, and acs, following exposure to D-serine. Next we demonstrate that CFT073 grows more rapidly than MG1655 when utilizing acetogenic substrates D-serine, D-alanine, or pyruvate as a carbon source as well as when growing on acetate as a sole carbon source. A CFT073 acs strain colonizes the urinary tract indistinguishably from wild-type CFT073. Both CFT073 pta and CFT073 akcA colonize the bladder normally but are at a competitive disadvantage in the murine kidney. CFT073 ackA pta is attenuated in both the bladder and the kidney. Our results support a role for acetogenic products, acetyl phosphate and acetyl-CoA, but not acetate in colonization of the urinary tract by CFT073.
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TABLE 1. Strains used in the study
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Microarray hybridization. The E. coli CFT073-specific DNA microarray (NimbleGen Systems, Inc.) includes 5,611 open reading frames (ORFs) and stable RNAs from prerelease version 17 of the compiled CFT073 genome sequence (from this lab; available upon request). Each ORF is represented on the glass slide by 17 unique probe pairs of 24-mer, in situ-synthesized oligonucleotides. Each pair consists of a sequence perfectly matched to the ORF and another adjacent sequence that harbors two mismatched bases for determination of background and cross-hybridization. Labeled cDNA samples were individually hybridized to the CFT073-specific microarray according to the NimbleGen standard operating procedure. Following washes and labeling with a streptavidin-Cy3 complex according to the NimbleGen procedure, microarrays were scanned at a 5-µm resolution using a GenePix 4000B scanner.
Microarray data analysis and statistical methods. Data were extracted using NimbleScan (NimbleGen), and an algorithm (courtesy of Yu Qiu, University of Wisconsin School of Medicine) was applied to obtain a measurement of signal intensity for each ORF as well as a call for a transcript's presence or absence. Data were normalized and converted to estimates of transcript abundance, using the total signal intensity, to allow comparison of individual microarrays (2). A P value for each ORF was calculated by a two-tailed Welch's unpaired t test comparison of the three microarray replicates for each strain. Fold changes of an ORF between strains were calculated using the following ratio: average CFT073 dsdA signal intensity/average wild-type CFT073 signal intensity. Only ORFs that had at least twofold changes, a P value of less than or equal to 0.05, and were called present on at least two microarrays were considered significant.
Growth comparisons.
Strains were grown on different carbon sources in a similar manner as that previously described (29). The following carbon source concentrations for MOPS minimal medium were used to monitor growth on a defined carbon source and normalized to 215 µM glycerol: 210 µM D-serine, 210 µM D-alanine, and 315 µM sodium acetate. Sodium pyruvate was used at a concentration of 315 µM. Overnight broth cultures were used to inoculate cultures to the growth curve of 1:50 or to an optical density at 600 nm (OD600) of
0.02. OD600 was measured hourly with a GENESYS 20 spectrophotometer (Thermo). Time points were graphed and subjected to a two-way analysis of variance with a Bonferroni correction using Prism 4.0c (GraphPad) to determine statistically significant differences in growth of the cultures. Doubling time was estimated with the nonlinear curve fit calculation in Prism 4.0c (GraphPad).
Construction of CFT073 mutants by
-Red recombination.
The construction of CFT073 ackA, CFT073 pta, CFT073 ackA pta, and CFT073 acs was accomplished by using the
-Red recombination system designed by Datsenko and Wanner (11). Oligonucleotides were designed for creation of the desired mutants as described previously (11) and were purchased from IDT and shown in Table 2. After each gene was replaced with an antibiotic resistance cassette, the cassettes were excised by Flp recombinase, encoded by pCP20, leaving a single FLP recombination target site as described previously (11). Excision of the antibiotic resistance cassettes was confirmed by PCR and loss of antibiotic resistance on the appropriate selective medium.
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TABLE 2. Oligonucleotides used in this study
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Thirty seconds after the addition of D-serine to CFT073 cells in exponential growth phase in a MOPS glycerol culture, the most highly upregulated genes were the D-serine-responsive gene dsdX and glycerate metabolism gene garP (data not shown). Thirty minutes postaddition, the genes coding for pyruvate dehydrogenase (aceEF), NADH dehydrogenase II (ndh), phosphotransacetylase (pta), and acetate kinase (ackA) were among the most highly upregulated genes, as shown in Table 3. Several genes were downregulated, notably the gene encoding acetyl-coA synthase (acs) (see Table S1 in the supplemental material), suggesting dissimilatory acetate metabolism in the presence of D-serine, consistent with acetyl phosphate accumulation (53). Additionally, genes coding for glycerol metabolism (glpQTA and glpKF) were downregulated, suggesting D-serine is a preferred carbon source to glycerol. The catabolic breakdown of D-serine by DsdA generates pyruvate, which in turn leads to the production of acetyl phosphate, acetyl-CoA, and acetate.
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TABLE 3. Genes upregulated in the D-serine-treated sample at 30 mina
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FIG. 1. Growth of CFT073 and MG1655 in MOPS medium cultures supplemented with different carbon sources: D-serine (a), pyruvate (b), D-alanine (c), and acetate (d). The times indicated below the strain names on the legends are the estimated doubling times based on the observed growth rates. The solid arrow in each graph indicates the time point at which the OD600 was at a statistically significant difference (P < 0.05) as determined by the Bonferroni posttest. In panel a, the dashed line indicates where the OD600s of the two cultures became statistically indistinguishable. All experiments were conducted a minimum of three times.
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Recycling of acetate via Acs is not necessary for colonization of the urinary tract. The enhanced ability of CFT073 to utilize acetate and acetogenic compounds in vitro may reflect a role for acetate catabolism in vivo during the course of a UTI. To investigate the role of acetate scavenging in vivo, a CFT073 acs strain was screened in coinfection with the wild type in the murine model of UTI. CFT073 acs was not attenuated in the murine urinary tract as depicted in Fig. 2. Conversion of high concentrations of acetate to acetyl-CoA mediated by Acs is not required for normal colonization of the urinary tract.
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FIG. 2. Bladder and kidney colonization of mice with wild-type (wt) and CFT073 acs. Mice were transurethrally inoculated with a 1:1 ratio of CFT073 lacZYA and CFT073 acs. Each data point represents the competitive index that is the ratio of recovered mutant CFU/g tissue to recovered wild-type CFU/g tissue for the designated organ tissue from one mouse 48 h postinoculation. Horizontal bars represent the median value of ratios for the organ type, which are 0.681 for the bladder (P < 0.008) and 0.483 for the kidney (P < 0.305). The dashed line indicates a competitive index of 1.0.
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To determine if acetyl phosphate plays a role in UTI pathogenesis, pta, ackA, and ackA pta mutants were screened in mice with coinfections with wild-type CFT073. When grown in tryptone broth, the mutants shown in Fig. 3 have a slightly reduced doubling rate of an hour per doubling (31) compared to CFT073, which doubles approximately every 50 min. The pta mutant was attenuated in the kidneys in a coinfection with wild-type CFT073 as shown in Fig. 4a. Similarly, the ackA mutant was attenuated in the kidneys in a coinfection with the wild type as shown in Fig. 4b. Both single-deletion mutants colonized the bladder to a similar degree, as did the wild-type strain. The ackA pta double mutant was attenuated in both the bladder and the kidneys in a coinfection with the wild type as shown in Fig. 4c. CFT073 pta, ackA, and pta ackA were indistinguishable from wild-type CFT073 in terms of expression of type I fimbriae, P fimbriae, and hemolysin (data not shown). Thus, we demonstrate that CFT073 requires acetyl phosphate metabolism in order to colonize the urinary tract to wild-type levels.
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FIG. 3. Growth of indicated strains in tryptone broth. Plasmid-complemented strains show growth similar to that of the wild-type CFT073. No antibiotic was used for the maintenance of the complementing plasmids. Complemented strains were checked for retention of plasmids by plasmid extraction with a QIAprep spin miniprep kit (Qiagen) at the end of the experiment. All complemented strains retained plasmids for the duration of the experiment without the use of antibiotic selective pressure.
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FIG. 4. Mice were transurethrally inoculated with a 1:1 ratio of CFT073 lacZYA and CFT073 pta (a), CFT073 lacZYA and CFT073 ackA (b), or CFT073 lacZYA and CFT073 ackA pta (c). Each data point represents the competitive index that is the ratio of recovered mutant CFU/g tissue to recovered wild-type (wt) CFU/g tissue for the designated organ tissue from one mouse 48 h postinoculation. Horizontal bars represent the median value of ratios for the organ type, which were equal to 0.636 (P = 0.232) and 0.120 (P = 0.021) (a), 0.670 (P = 0.787) and 0.092 (P = 0.007) (b), and 0.032 (P = 0.039) and 0.042 (P = 0.016) (c) for the bladder and kidney, respectively. The dashed line indicates a competitive index of 1.0.
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Our laboratory demonstrated that UPEC CFT073 upregulates D-serine-responsive genes in the murine urinary tract (19), and Roos and Klemm (45) showed that asymptomatic-bacteriuria strain 83972 significantly upregulates the D-serine deaminase gene, dsdA, in the human urinary tract. These observations when paired with our current observations that D-serine is degraded to acetate by CFT073 suggest UPEC can readily generate acetyl phosphate in vivo while in the urinary tract. The consumption of the relatively plentiful nutrient D-serine within the urinary tract may lead CFT073 to be better adapted to acetate metabolism than E. coli strains lacking the D-serine deaminase locus. To further investigate the hypothesis that UPEC and specifically CFT073 are adapted for growth on acetogenic substrates, we examined the growth of CFT073 and MG1655 on different relevant carbon sources. Both strains have similar doubling rates with D-serine as a sole carbon source, but interestingly, CFT073 grew much more readily and rapidly than MG1655 when utilizing D-alanine, pyruvate, or acetate as a sole carbon source. The concentration of either acetate or pyruvate in urine is unknown; however, D-alanine is present at concentrations that approach the levels of D-serine (20, 37). The more-rapid growth rate of CFT073 on these carbon sources suggests, when combined with previous observations, that efficient acetogenic carbon metabolism is an adaptive response by CFT073 which permits it to readily exploit the nutritional niche of the urinary tract.
When grown in tryptone broth, E. coli first consumes the serine present in the medium (39, 46, 53). Concurrent with the utilization of serine, there is an increase in the intracellular concentration of acetyl phosphate. Acetyl phosphate levels decrease, following depletion of serine, as the acetyl phosphate is secreted as acetate (53). Similar events occur when E. coli is grown on other acetogenic carbon sources (53). The intracellular concentration of acetyl phosphate is approximately 3 mM, similar in magnitude to that of ATP (25). Acetyl phosphate can act as a global signal by serving as a phosphate donor to two-component regulatory systems due to the high-energy phosphate bond (25, 30, 38, 46, 53). The events influenced by acetyl phosphate are of relevance to the study of pathogenesis as acetyl phosphate directly phosphorylates OmpR (38, 40, 46), RssB (7), RcsB (15), NtrC (13), and other (53) response regulators involved in the periplasmic stress response and in the regulation of virulence factors (25, 53).
We demonstrate that assimilatory acetate metabolism mediated by Acs is not required for wild-type colonization of the urinary tract by CFT073. The CFT073 acs mutant colonizes the murine urinary tract indistinguishably from wild-type CFT073. Therefore, Acs-mediated reclamation of the acetate secreted following active serine catabolism is not an important metabolic event during murine urinary tract colonization. The CFT073 acs mutant results also suggest that UPEC bacteria are growing rapidly on acetogenic carbon sources, like serine and alanine, and probably do not come close to reaching stationary phase while colonizing the urinary tract.
Unlike assimilatory acetate metabolism, dissimilatory acetate metabolism does play a role in colonization of the murine urinary tract. We demonstrate that mutations that affect the normal balance of acetyl-CoA and acetyl phosphate negatively affect the ability of CFT073 to colonize the murine urinary tract. CFT073 ackA and CFT073 pta showed an inability to properly colonize the kidney while CFT073 ackA pta was impaired in its ability to colonize both the bladder and the kidney. These data clearly show that the components of dissimilatory acetate metabolism are necessary for wild-type colonization of the murine urinary tract and suggest that maintenance of a proper intracellular acetyl phosphate concentration is also important.
Intracellular acetyl phosphate concentrations peak early in log phase, concurrent with depletion of serine (39, 53). Our interest in intracellular acetyl phosphate extends beyond its ties to growth phase. We are interested in intracellular acetyl phosphate because acetyl phosphate is able to directly phosphorylate response regulators involved in the periplasmic stress response (25, 50, 53), which is vital for wild-type colonization of the urinary tract (42, 43). We have observed a loss of ability to colonize the murine urinary tract associated with an inability to deaminate L- and D-serine (4). When these observations are paired with our previous observations of the importance of the periplasmic stress response in colonization of the mouse model (42, 43), the alterations in colonization associated with the dissimilatory acetate metabolism mutants seem likely due to an inability to accumulate acetyl phosphate, an inappropriate acetyl-CoA level, or an altered stress response.
Acetate metabolism is an important factor for many other microbial pathogens and is proving to be a conserved and useful signaling molecule. In Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium, a pta mutant is attenuated in the mouse model of peritonitis (24). Both ackA and pta are upregulated in vivo in Pasteurella multocida (22). A probable role for acetyl phosphate metabolism in extraintestinal, gram-negative pathogenesis is in the indirect effect acetyl phosphate has on the histone-like protein H-NS (21). H-NS is capable of repressing numerous processes, often associated with horizontally acquired DNA that plays a role in pathogenesis (5, 14, 16, 17, 23, 27, 34). UPEC 536 hns upregulated numerous virulence factors (34) similarly to a CFT073 mutant that colonizes the murine urinary tract in a robust fashion (19). Interestingly, OmpR-P is able to overcome H-NS repression of ompR expression (5). OmpR can be phosphorylated independently of EnvZ (25, 39, 40, 46, 51, 53), its cognate sensor kinase, in the presence of acetyl phosphate. Acetyl phosphate is therefore able to relieve some of the effects of H-NS repression (5). We propose that mutants in the ackA-pta pathway are attenuated in the urinary tract due to an inability to maintain proper intracellular acetyl phosphate concentrations, which leads to reduced derepression of H-NS. We are currently investigating the role of EnvZ-independent phosphorylation of OmpR in UTI pathogenesis.
This research was supported by NIH grant R01DK063250. B.J.H. was also supported by NIH National Research Service Award T32 GM07215.
Published ahead of print on 6 October 2008. ![]()
Supplemental material for this article may be found at http://iai.asm.org/. ![]()
Present address: Genomics Institute of the Novartis Research Foundation, La Jolla, CA 92121. ![]()
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