Previous Article | Next Article ![]()
Infection and Immunity, June 2008, p. 2620-2632, Vol. 76, No. 6
0019-9567/08/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/IAI.01308-07
Copyright © 2008, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.

and
David R. Nelson*
Department of Cell and Molecular Biology, University of Rhode Island, Kingston, Rhode Island 02881
Received 26 September 2007/ Returned for modification 16 January 2008/ Accepted 24 March 2008
|
|
|---|
|
|
|---|
Several genes have been reported to be correlated with the virulence of V. anguillarum, such as the vah1 hemolysin gene cluster (40), the siderophore-mediated iron transport system (16), the empA metalloprotease gene (15, 36), and the flaA gene (37). The hemolytic activity of V. anguillarum has been considered the virulence factor responsible for hemorrhagic septicemia during infection (27). Hirono et al. (27) identified the first hemolysin gene, vah1, in V. anguillarum and suggested that the vah1 gene is broadly distributed among V. anguillarum strains. Rock and Nelson (40) described a vah1 gene cluster in V. anguillarum strain M93Sm, in which the vah1 gene was linked to two putative lipase-related genes (llpA and llpB) and a hemolysin-like gene (plp) that appeared to function as a repressor of hemolytic activity. Furthermore, mutations in the vah1 cluster of genes did not result in the loss of hemolytic activity, suggesting that V. anguillarum contained more than one hemolysin (40). Additionally, Rodkhum et al. (41) found that V. anguillarum strain H775-3 contained four hemolysin genes (vah2, vah3, vah4, and vah5) in addition to vah1. The encoded proteins showed strong similarities to hemolysins of V. vulnificus (vah2) and V. cholerae (vah3, vah4, and vah5).
The repeat-in-toxin (RTX) family is a group of related protein toxins found in gram-negative bacteria. These toxins have a broad range of distribution and activities, which includes Escherichia coli HlyA hemolytic toxin (2, 35), V. cholerae RtxA cytotoxin (32), V. vulnificus RtxA cytotoxin (31), Bordetella pertussis CyaA adenylate cyclase (26), Pseudomonas aeruginosa alkaline protease (3), and Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae Apx toxin (28, 29). These toxin genes usually form an operon and share some common features, such as posttranslational maturation by acylation, a C-terminal calcium-binding domain with tandem glycine/aspartic acid-rich repeats, and secretion of the toxin facilitated by type I secretion systems (TISS) (6). Studies demonstrate that the rtx operons are commonly found in Vibrio species. Lin et al. (32) first identified an rtx operon in V. cholerae and showed that the Rtx toxin caused HEp-2 cells to round up. Further research demonstrated that the Rtx toxin in V. cholerae was responsible for the covalent cross-linking of cellular actin (22), and an actin cross-linking domain (ACD) was recently discovered in the RtxA protein of V. cholerae (11). The rtx operon was also found in V. vulnificus where it functioned as a cytotoxin (31). Lee et al. (31) showed that V. vulnificus virulence in mice was dependent on rtxA. Recently, Satchell (42) renamed the RtxA toxin of V. cholerae the multifunctional autoprocessing Rtx toxin (MARTX). This new family of RtxA toxins exhibits highly conserved structural domains and variable catalytic activity domains assembled as mosaics. MARTX toxins are found in at least eight gram-negative bacterial species, including members of the genera Vibrio, Aeromonas, and Yersinia (42).
In this study, we sought to identify and characterize genes in addition to vah1 that contribute to the hemolytic activity of V. anguillarum M93Sm. Minitransposon mutagenesis was used to create and screen for hemolysin-negative mutants in a vah1 mutant background. One mutant that exhibited negative hemolytic activity was obtained, and the region surrounding this mutation was cloned and sequenced. A putative rtx operon was identified and characterized. Additionally, the contributions of the Vah1 and the Rtx hemolysins to cytotoxicity in Atlantic salmon kidney (ASK) cells and to virulence in juvenile Atlantic salmon were determined.
|
|
|---|
|
View this table: [in a new window] |
TABLE 1. Bacterial strains and plasmids used in this study
|
pir) by conjugation procedures described previously (37). Briefly, aliquots (100 µl) from overnight cultures of V. anguillarum and E. coli Sm10 were mixed at ratios of 1:1 in 2.5 ml of NSS plus 2.5 ml 10 mM MgSO4. The cell mixture was vacuum filtered onto a 0.45-µm-pore-size filter, which was placed on an LB15 agar plate (Luria-Bertani agar plus 1.5% NaCl) and allowed to incubate overnight at 27°C. Following incubation, the cells were removed from the filter by vigorous vortexing in 5 ml NSS. The cell suspension was spread on appropriate selection plates and allowed to incubate at 27°C until V. anguillarum colonies were observed.
Mini-Tn10Km mutagenesis.
Mini-Tn10Km mutagenesis was carried out by using a method developed by Herrero et al. (25), with a modification (40). Briefly, V. anguillarum M93Sm was mated with E. coli CC118 (
pir)(pLOFKm) containing the mini-Tn10Km according the procedures described above. The transconjugants were selected onto LB20 plates supplemented with 200 µg/ml streptomycin (Sm200) and 80 µg/ml kanamycin (Kan80) for V. anguillarum mutants containing a mini-Tn10Km insertion. V. anguillarum colonies able to grow on LB20-Sm200-Kan80 were transferred onto trypticase soy agar (TSA)-sheep blood agar plates, and hemolytic activity was determined by measuring β-hemolysis after 24 h at 27°C.
Cloning of the mini-Tn10Km insertion mutation.
The region surrounding the gene, interrupted by the mini-Tn10Km mutagenesis, was cloned into pBluescript SKII+ (Stratagene). Briefly, genomic DNA from V. anguillarum strain JR7 was extracted and digested with SacI, and digestion fragments were ligated into the SacI-digested site of pBluescript SKII+. Then, the ligated DNA was transformed into E. coli XL1 MRF' by electroporation, using a Bio-Rad gene pulser (at 1.5 kV, 25 µF, 200
). Transformants were selected on LB agar plates supplemented with 100 µg/ml ampicillin. Plasmid DNA was purified from the clone using a Qiagen Mini-Prep kit (Qiagen). The plasmids were checked for the presence of inserted V. anguillarum DNA containing mini-Tn10Km by restriction digestion, followed by agarose gel electrophoresis. Clones of interest were saved for future study and sequencing.
Construction of the vah1::Km allelic exchange mutation.
The plasmid pDM4 (generously provided by Debra Milton) was used to construct the vah1::Km allelic exchange mutant as described previously by Milton et al. (37). The kanamycin resistance gene was amplified from the TOPO2.1 vector (Invitrogen) with the primer pair Pm152 and Pm153 (Table 2) and inserted into the XbaI and SphI sites of pDM4. The 5' and 3' regions of vah1 were amplified by PCR and inserted into either side of the kanamycin gene. The 5' flanking region of vah1 was amplified from M93Sm genomic DNA with the primer pair Pm156 and Pm157 (Table 2), which amplified a 489-bp product and introduced XhoI and XbaI sites at the ends of the PCR product. The 3' flanking region was amplified from M93Sm genomic DNA with the primer pair Pm154 and Pm155 (Table 2), which amplified a 469-bp product and introduced SphI and SacI sites at the ends of the PCR product. Both of these PCR products were cloned, sequenced, and subcloned on either side of the kanamycin resistance gene to produce the pDM4 derivative plasmid pLL1106, which was transformed into E. coli Sm10 (
pir) to produce the transformant strain S156. S156 was mated with V. anguillarum M93Sm, and the double-crossover transconjugants were selected with LB20-Kan80-Sm200-5% sucrose plates. The resulting V. anguillarum mutants were checked for the desired allelic exchange using PCR amplification and restriction enzyme digestion. The mutant was designated S171 and used in further studies.
|
View this table: [in a new window] |
TABLE 2. Primers used in this study
|
RT-PCR.
The V. anguillarum wild-type strain M93Sm was grown to exponential phase (
2 x 108 CFU/ml), and 1 ml of cells was harvested by centrifugation at 8,000 x g for 10 min. Total RNA was isolated using an RNeasy kit (Qiagen) according to the manufacturer's instructions. Isolated RNA was treated with DNase and used as the template (a 1-µg-per-50-µl reaction mixture) for reverse transcription (RT)-PCR. RT-PCR was performed using Brilliant SYBR Green single-step quantitative RT-PCR (qRT-PCR) Master Mix (Stratagene). Briefly, gene-specific primers (Table 2) were used to reverse transcribe the specific cDNA from RNA templates, and the resulting cDNA was used as the template with which to amplify the specific DNA product, using the regular PCR method. Genomic DNA (1 µg) extracted from wild-type strain M93Sm was used as the positive control. The reaction mixture without the addition of reverse transcriptase was used as a negative control. The thermal profile was 50°C for 30 min and 95°C for 15 min and then 35 cycles of 95°C for 30 s, 55°C for 30 s, and 72°C for 30 s. PCR product was visualized in a 1% agarose gel with a 100-bp DNA molecular weight ladder (Promega).
DNA sequencing. All DNA sequencing was done at the URI Genomics and Sequencing Center (University of Rhode Island, Kingston, RI), using an ABI3170xl Genetic Analyzer unit (Applied Biosystems).
Complementation of the rtx mutants. The rtx gene fragments were cloned to test the ability to complement the various rtx gene mutants, as described previously by Rock and Nelson (40). The mutants were complemented by cloning the appropriate genes into the shuttle vector pSUP202 (GenBank accession no. AY428809). Briefly, total genomic DNA from V. anguillarum M93Sm was isolated. A restriction site (PstI or EcoRI) was chosen according to the rtx operon sequence data (GenBank accession no. EU155486) and added to the PCR primer set used to amplify the gene of interest plus the putative native promoter region (Pnative), which is the 500-bp upstream region of the rtxD and rtxE genes and the whole intergenic region of the rtxC and rtxB genes (as shown in Fig. 4A). For making constitutive expressed rtx genes, a constitutive promoter for flaB (PflaB) (17), which was confirmed to constitutively express in both E. coli and V. anguillarum (L. Li and D. R. Nelson, unpublished data), was used to create PflaB-driven rtx genes (PflaB mutant) (Fig. 4A). PflaB was PCR amplified using plasmid pCE320(gfp)-PflaB (kindly supplied by Christian Eggers) (17) as the template. The restriction site SpeI was added to the primer set, which was used to insert the flaB promoter in front of the rtx gene (an SpeI site was also added to the PCR primer sets). All PCR fragments were subcloned into the PCR2.1 vector and digested with the appropriate restriction enzyme. The gel-purified gene fragment was ligated into pSUP202 and transformed into E. coli Sm10. E. coli Sm10 containing various pSUP202 plasmid derivatives (Fig. 4A) was conjugated into various rtx gene mutants by using the procedures described above. The conjugants were confirmed by using PCR amplification and restriction digestion.
![]() View larger version (28K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 4. Complementation of the rtx mutants and their hemolytic activities. Various gene(s) fragments driven by either a native promoter (Pnative) or a constitutive promoter (PflaB) (A) were cloned into shuttle vector pSUP202 and introduced into various V. anguillarum mutant strains by bacterial mating, as described previously (40). The resulting transconjugants were used to test the hemolytic activities on sheep blood agar plates incubated at 27°C for 48 h, and the relative hemolytic activities were compared with those of the wild-type strain M93Sm (B).
|
2 x 105 cells ml–1. V. anguillarum cultures grown overnight were harvested, washed twice in NSS, and resuspended in NSS (at a cell density of
2 x 109 cells ml–1). The supernatant from the overnight culture was filtered though a 0.22-µm-pore-size filter (Millipore). Washed bacterial cells were added to ASK cells at various multiplicities of infection (MOI) and incubated at 20°C for up to 4 h. Filtered supernatant (1 ml) was added directly to ASK cells containing 1 ml fresh medium and incubated at 20°C for 4 h or overnight (20 h). Changes in cell morphology were assessed and photographed by viewing live cells with an inverted microscope (Nikon TE2000 model). The concentration and viability of ASK cells were determined by the trypan blue dye exclusion method using a Vi-Cell cell viability analyzer (Beckman Coulter).
Fish infections.
Hemolysin mutants were tested for virulence with juvenile Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar L.) by intraperitoneal (i.p.) injection, as described by Denkin and Nelson (14). Briefly, V. anguillarum cells grown in LB20 supplemented with appropriate antibiotics for 18 h at 27°C were harvested by centrifugation (8,000 x g, 10 min, 4°C), washed twice in NSS, and suspended in NSS. The cell density of NSS suspensions was determined by serial dilution and spot plating. Fifteen fish (10 to 15 cm long) were used to test the virulence of each bacterial strain. Seven fish were sham inoculated with NSS as a negative control. Fish inoculated with different bacterial strains were maintained in separate tanks to prevent possible cross-contamination. Five fish were inoculated per dose, and three different doses per strain were used. Fish were inoculated i.p. with 100 µl of cells (ranging from
105 to 107 CFU ml–1) in NSS or with NSS alone (control fish). The fish were anesthetized in water supplemented with tricaine methane sulfonate (100 mg ml–1) prior to inoculation and allowed to recover before they were returned to their tanks. Death due to vibriosis was determined by the observation of gross clinical signs and confirmed by the recovery and isolation of V. anguillarum cells resistant to the appropriate antibiotics from infected organs of dead fish. Observations were made for 21 days. All fish used in this research project were obtained from the URI East Farm Aquaculture Center.
|
|
|---|
![]() View larger version (63K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 1. Hemolytic activity of the wild-type V. anguillarum M93Sm and its hemolysin mutant strains with TSA-5% sheep blood agar. Mutations in single rtx genes did not eliminate the hemolytic activity of M93Sm (A); however, mutations in both the vah1 and rtx genes resulted in the loss of hemolysin activity (B). All bacterial strains were transferred onto a sheep blood agar plate and incubated at 27°C for 48 h. S123, the rtxA mutant strain; S189, the rtxC mutant strain; S103, the rtxB mutant strain; S191, the rtxD mutant strain; S206, the rtxE mutant strain. S183, the vah1 rtxA double mutant strain; S193, the vah1 rtxC double mutant strain; JR7, the vah1 rtxB double mutant strain; S195, the vah1 rtxD double mutant strain; S208, the vah1 rtxE double mutant strain.
|
13 kbp containing the kanamycin resistance gene was obtained, and the plasmid designated pJR7 was isolated for DNA sequencing. Sequencing of the pJR7 plasmid revealed four complete open reading frames (ORFs) and one incomplete ORF (Fig. 2A). BLASTx analysis of the ORFs within this region (24) revealed a cluster of genes that displayed a high level of similarity to genes involved in the biogenesis of RTX toxins in several gram-negative organisms, including V. cholerae N16961 (GenBank accession number NP231094) (32) and V. vulnificus CMCP6 (GenBank accession number NP762440) and YJ016 (GenBank accession number NP937086) (9). A 13,200-bp ORF homologue of rtxA encodes a putative 440-kDa exotoxin designated rtxA of V. anguillarum (rtxVa). A 462-bp rtxC-like gene, designated rtxCVa, is upstream of rtxAVa and encodes a putative acylase for RtxAVa activation. Additionally, a 336-bp rtxH-like V. anguillarum gene, rtxHVa, is upstream of rtxCVa. Two ORFs located downstream of rtxAVa are homologous to nicotinate-nucleotide-dimethylbenzimidazole phosphoribosyltransferase (ORF1) and cobalamin synthase (ORF2). The sequence of the incomplete ORF was found to be homologous to the rtxB gene, an ABC transporter containing an ATP binding cassette that is thought to facilitate the transport of RTX toxins. Sequencing data also revealed that the mini-Tn10Km was inserted into this rtxB homologue gene (designated rtxBVa), which has an orientation opposite to that of rtxHVa, rtxCVa, and rtxAVa (Fig. 2A).
![]() View larger version (14K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 2. Comparison of the rtx operon organization in V. anguillarum M93Sm (A) with that of V. cholerae and V. vulnificus (B). (A) The rtx operon and its flanking DNA in V. anguillarum M93Sm, as follows: rtxAVa encodes RtxA, a secreted toxin and virulence factor; rtxCVa is a putative acylase that acts as an RtxAVa activator; rtxHVa is a conserved hypothetical gene; rtxBDEVa are putative ABC transporters of RtxAVa. The open arrow indicates the insertion of the kanamycin cassette by mini-Tn10Km mutagenesis in the rtxBVa gene in JR7 (the vah1 rtxB double mutant). The DNA fragment between the SacI sites was cloned into plasmid pJR7 and sequenced by primer walking. The rest of the DNA is cloned and sequenced using inverse PCR. Identifications based on BLASTx similarities, as follows: ORF1, nicotinate-nucleotide-dimethylbenzimidazole phosphoribosyltransferase; ORF2, cobalamin synthase; ORF3, chemotaxis gene; ORF4, Na-carboxylase symporter. (B) The rtx operon and its flanking genes in V. cholerae El Tor strain N16961 and V. vulnificus strain YJ016 (9). The diagram shows the arrangements are identical for the rtx operon and the distinct flanking genes of three Vibrio species.
|
|
View this table: [in a new window] |
TABLE 3. Homology analysis of the rtx operon of V. anguillarum and other species
|
In contrast to the RtxA toxins, the activator (RtxCVa), the RtxHVa, and the secretion (RtxBVa, RtxDVa, and RtxEVa) gene products for RtxAVa share significant similarities among bacterial species. For example, RtxBVa has a homology of 63% to RtxB of E. coli O157:H7 and 86% to RtxB of V. vulnificus CMCP6. High similarities of transporter proteins indicate that RtxA toxin-related TISSs have been highly conserved in gram-negative bacteria. Interestingly, there are usually three transport genes, rtxB, rtxD, and rtxE, for the secretion of RtxA toxins larger than 350 kDa or 3,200 amino acids in length, like those in Vibrio, Yersinia, or Aeromonas species (Table 3), while only two transport genes, rtxB and rtxD, are described for the secretion of relatively smaller RtxA toxins, such as those in B. pertussis, E. coli, and Pseudomonas species, which have RtxA toxins with molecular masses of 177 kDa (26), 110 kDa (35), and 55 kDa (3), respectively. Additionally, RtxE proteins are also ATP binding proteins, which share high homology with RtxB. For example, RtxEVa was found to have 64% similarity with RtxB of E. coli O157:H7 (Table 3), as well as 84% similarity with RtxE of V. vulnificus and V. cholerae.
While the arrangement of rtx genes in V. anguillarum M93Sm was also found to be similar to that of other species, the flanking sequences are quite different, even for other species of Vibrio (Fig. 2). Specifically, immediately adjacent to the rtxE gene of V. anguillarum M93Sm there is a putative chemotaxis gene (ORF3). In V. cholerae, a histidine kinase/response regulator (VC1445) is adjacent to rtxE, while a ubiquitous dehydrogenase (VVA1037) is found in V. vulnificus YJ016 (9). On the other side of the rtx gene cluster (downstream of rtxA), CTX structural genes and bacteriophage elements are present in the V. cholerae genome (32), and the V. vulnificus YJ016 rtx genes are located next to an alanine racemase gene (VVA1029), whereas a cobalamin synthase gene (ORF2) is downstream of the V. anguillarum M93Sm rtxA gene (Fig. 2).
The rtx operon confers hemolytic activity in V. anguillarum M93Sm. Mutations were constructed in each rtx gene by insertional mutagenesis, as described in Materials and Methods. Examination of each mutant for hemolytic activity revealed that a single mutation in any rtx gene gave a hemolytic activity similar to that of the wild-type strain M93Sm (Fig. 1). The results indicated that the loss of any rtx gene did not eliminate hemolytic activity, a result which was consistent with the previous report suggesting that V. anguillarum contains two hemolysin gene clusters, one of which includes the vah1 hemolysin gene (40). In order to eliminate the hemolytic effect of vah1, a mutation in vah1 was constructed by allelic exchange. The resulting mutant (S171) had a hemolytic activity similar to that of the wild type, as shown previously (40) (data not shown). The insertional mutation in each of the rtx genes was constructed in the S171 background. The vah1 rtxAVa double mutant (S183) exhibited a negative hemolytic activity (Fig. 1), which indicated that both vah1 and rtxAVa were required for hemolytic activity in V. anguillarum M93Sm. Furthermore, strains carrying the double mutations of vah1 and any other gene in the rtx operon, including vah1 rtxCVa (S193), vah1 rtxBVa (JR7), vah1 rtxDVa (S195), and vah1 rtxEVa (S208), all failed to exhibit any hemolytic activity (Fig. 1). This result indicated that all genes in the rtx operon were necessary for the hemolytic activity in V. anguillarum M93Sm.
Transcriptional analysis of the rtxVa operon.
RT-PCR was used to discover the transcriptional pattern of the rtx genes in V. anguillarum M93Sm. Primers complementary to the 3' end of one gene and the 5' end of the immediately adjacent downstream gene were used to determine whether transcription resulted in polycistronic mRNA (Table 2 and Fig. 3). RT-PCR data showed that a 646-bp PCR product was amplified with primers crossing the intergenic space of rtxCVa and rtxAVa (Fig. 3, lane 7), which indicated that rtxAVa and rtxCVa were transcribed together as a polycistronic mRNA, even with 22 bases between the two genes. Additionally, quantitative RT-PCR showed that rtxCVa and rtxAVa had similar numbers of transcripts,
106 copies per 100 ng total RNA (data not shown). Furthermore, RT-PCR products of the predicted size were generated between rtxBVa and rtxDVa (577 bp) and between rtxDVa and rtxEVa (670 bp) (Fig. 3, lanes 17 and 27, respectively), indicating that the three transporter genes were also transcribed as a polycistronic mRNA, as suggested by sequence analysis, since the three transporter genes overlap each other (Fig. 2A).
![]() View larger version (23K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 3. RT-PCR analysis of transcription from the rtx operon in V. anguillarum M93Sm. RT-PCR was performed with 100 ng RNA obtained from M93Sm cells grown for 12 h in LB20, using primers labeled as A (Pm112), B (Pm111), C (Pm181), D (Pm180), E (Pm185), F (Pm184), G (Pm183), H (Pm182), I (Pm189), J (Pm187), K (Pm191), and L (Pm190). Lanes 4, 14, and 24, 100-bp molecular marker; lanes 1 to 3, 11 to 13, and 21 to 23, PCRs performed with M93Sm genomic DNA as template served as positive controls; lanes 5 to 7, 15 to 17, and 25 to 27, RT-PCRs performed with 100 ng RNA from 12-h M93Sm cultures. Lanes 8 to 10, 18 to 20, and 28 to 30, PCRs performed without reverse transcriptase, as negative controls. The primers used were as follows: A and B, shown in lanes 1, 5, and 8; C and D, shown in lanes 2, 6, and 9; A and D, shown in lanes 3, 7, and 10; E and F, shown in lanes 11, 15, and 18; G and H, shown in lanes 12, 16, and 19; E and H, shown in lanes 13, 17, and 20; I and J, shown in lanes 21, 25, and 28; K and L, shown in lanes 22, 26, and 29; I and L, shown in lanes 23, 27, and 30. The map of the rtx operon shows the locations of the primers used and the lengths of the amplicons obtained.
|
Plasmids containing the rtxB/HC intergenic region plus the rtxC gene (Pnative-rtxC) or the PflaB-driven rtxC gene (PflaB-rtxC) (Fig. 4) did not restore the hemolytic activity of strain S193 (the vah1 rtxC mutant). Thus, the mutation in rtxC had a polar effect on the rtxA gene. Attempts to complement the vah1 rtxA double mutant were not successful due to the difficulty of cloning and conjugating the 13-kbp-long rtxA or rtxHCA gene fragment.
Cytotoxic activities of Vah1 and RtxAVa against ASK cells.
The RTX toxins produced in V. cholerae and other gram-negative bacteria typically display cytotoxic or hemolytic activities (31, 32, 35). In V. cholerae, RTX toxin causes HEp-2 cells to round up and detach from surfaces (32). In this study, an ASK cell line was used to test the cytotoxic activity of V. anguillarum M93Sm and its various hemolysin mutants. Briefly, ASK cells (
3 x 105 cells/ml) were exposed to V. anguillarum cells (MOI, 500) for up to 4 h. As shown in Fig. 5A, more than 99% of the ASK cells were detached and killed (P < 0.01) when exposed to washed M93Sm cells. ASK cells also exhibited extensive rounding prior to detachment (Fig. 5B-1). Exposing the ASK cells to washed S171 (the vah1 deletion mutant) cells also resulted in rounding and a significant decrease in attachment (Fig. 5B-2). After 4 h of exposure to S171 cells, only 8% of the ASK cells were still attached to the surface (P < 0.01) compared to that attached to NSS-treated cells. The rtxA mutant strain (S123) exhibited weaker cytotoxicity against ASK cells, with about 60% of the cells still attached after treatment (P < 0.1). No rounding of the ASK cells was observed when they were treated with S123 cells (Fig. 5B-3). When ASK cells were exposed to the hemolysin-negative strain S183 (the vah1 rtxA double mutant), no cytotoxic activity was observed (Fig. 5A) during the 4-h exposure, and ASK cells did not exhibit rounding, detachment, or cell death (Fig. 5B-4). The data strongly suggest that while both Vah1 and RtxAVa contribute to the cytotoxicity of V. anguillarum cells, ASK cell rounding was observed only when RtxAVa was present. Additionally, the occurrence of ASK cell rounding was observed in the presence of the wild-type M93Sm after only 1 h at a lower MOI value (MOI, 100). It should be noted that at this time and MOI, most ASK cells were still attached and cell viability was similar to that of the NSS-treated cells (data not shown). This suggested that cell rounding precedes cell detachment and death.
![]() View larger version (77K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 5. The cytotoxicity of V. anguillarum M93Sm and hemolysin mutant strains against ASK cells. (A) ASK cells were treated with M93Sm and its derivative hemolysin mutants at an MOI of 500 for 4 h. Determination of the ASK cell density and viability is described in Materials and Methods and was carried out using a trypan blue dye exclusion assay. Bars represent the standard deviations of three independent measurements. P values above each bar of assays were calculated by t test analysis. (B) The morphological changes of treated ASK cells were observed by inverted microscopy at a magnification of x100. ASK cells were incubated for 1 h with NSS-washed V. anguillarum cells at an MOI of 100. The V. anguillarum strains added were M93Sm (B-1), S171 (vah1 mutant) (B-2), S123 (rtxA mutant) (B-3), S183 (vah1 rtxA double mutant) (B-4), and mock (NSS).
|
![]() View larger version (81K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 6. Morphological changes to ASK cells caused by culture supernatants from the V. anguillarum wild-type M93Sm and hemolysin mutant strains observed by inverted microscopy (magnification, x100). ASK cells were exposed to overnight (o/n) culture supernatants for 4 h (top row) and for 24 h (bottom row). The V. anguillarum strains from which the supernatants were obtained are indicated at the top of each photo.
|
3 x 106 CFU of the wild-type strain M93Sm suffered 100% mortality by 3 days, while fish inoculated with
3 x 105 CFU suffered 60% mortality by 5 days and 40% mortality by 9 days with an inoculation of
3 x 104 CFU. Similar levels of killing were observed with fish infected with S171 (the vah1 mutant), with 100% mortality at a dose of 2.9 x 106 CFU, 60% mortality at 2.9 x 105 CFU, and 20% mortality when inoculated with 2.9 x 104 CFU. The data indicated that the vah1 mutant showed no significant change in virulence compared with the wild-type strain M93Sm. In contrast, no deaths by vibriosis were observed when fish were inoculated with either the rtxA mutant S123 or the vah1 rtxA double mutant S183. Taken together, these observations strongly suggest that the RtxA hemolysin is a major virulence factor of V. anguillarum and that the mutation in rtxA results in avirulence to Atlantic salmon. |
View this table: [in a new window] |
TABLE 4. Virulence of V. anguillarum strains in juvenile Atlantic salmon
|
|
|
|---|
Single-insertion mutations created in rtx genes did not eliminate hemolytic activity. These single mutants exhibited hemolytic activity similar to that of the wild-type strain M93Sm (Fig. 1). However, double mutations in vah1 and any of the rtx genes resulted in a hemolysis-negative phenotype (Fig. 1), demonstrating that the rtx operon is a second hemolysin gene cluster in V. anguillarum M93Sm. These data, consistent with that of Rock and Nelson (40), demonstrate that hemolytic activity in V. anguillarum M93Sm is the result of two clusters of hemolysin genes, the vah1 cluster and the rtx cluster.
RTX toxins are a diverse group of protein toxins synthesized by many gram-negative bacteria. Members of the RTX toxin family have been identified as cytolytic toxins, metalloproteases, lipases, and adenylate cyclases. They include E. coli hemolysin HlyA (35), V. cholerae cytotoxin RtxA (32), V. vulnificus cytotoxin RtxA (31), and B. pertussis adenylate cyclase CyaA (4, 26). Most RTX toxins are proteins with a molecular mass ranging from 100 kDa to >400 kDa and are posttranslationally activated by acylation via a specific acyltransferase. The repeated structure of RTX toxin proteins, which gave them their name, is composed typically of repeated glycine-rich nonapeptides binding Ca2+ on the C-terminal half of the protein (20). The N-terminal sequence of RTX toxins is thought to contain sequences that are responsible for binding to target cells and promoting the formation of cation-selective pores (4, 35). It is interesting that while RtxAVa has typical glycine-rich nonapeptide repeats, closer inspection revealed that the repeats may actually be 18-mer repeats. That is, instead of the usual 9-residue (GGXGXDXXX) repeats, an extra 9 amino acid residues are added to each repeat, resulting in an 18-residue consensus motif, GGXGXDXXVXXGXXNXXX. For RtxAVa, these repeats are found at the C-terminal end of the protein (amino acid residues 4031 to 4165) (Fig. 7B). Lin et al. (32) also found 18-residue GD-rich repeats at the C-terminal end of the RtxA toxin of V. cholerae. Additionally, we found that RtxAVa contains a novel 19-amino-acid repeat with the consensus motif GX(A/G)N(I/V)XT(K/H)VGDGXXXXXXX (RtxAVa, amino acids 784 to 1354) (Fig. 7A). This novel 19-amino-acid repeat is very similar to the 19-amino-acid repeat found in V. cholerae, with the consensus sequence of GXAN(I/V)XT(K/H)VGDGXTVAVMX (32). Recently, Satchell (42) demonstrated that MARTX toxins are distinguished from other RTX toxins by the large number of primary sequences composed of glycine-rich repeats. The author noted that there are three conserved repeat regions in the MARTX toxin family, termed the A, B, and C repeats. The A repeats are 20-amino-acid repeats located near the N terminus. The B repeats (originally novel repeats) are 19-amino-acid repeats just downstream of the A repeats. The C repeats are 18-amino-acid GD-rich repeats of the C-terminal region. Similar repeat regions in the rtxA gene indicate that RtxAVa also is a member of MARTX toxin family. We also found two conserved domains by using a search of the CDD (34). One domain is located at amino acid residues 2728 to 2808 and appears to be an alpha/beta hydrolase fold (NCBI Conserved Domains database no. pfam00561). The other domain is located at amino acid residues 1609 to 1868. This domain is similar to a TolA-like protein (pfam06519). The function of these domains in RtxAVa toxin is unknown.
![]() View larger version (43K): [in a new window] |
FIG. 7. Features of RtxAVa toxin. (A) Conserved domains found in RtxAVa. NR, novel repeat or B-repeat (amino acids 784 to 1354); Tol-A like, domain (amino acids 1609 to 1868); Hydrolase fold, amino acids 2728 to 2808; GD-R, GD-rich repeat or C repeat (amino acids 4031 to 4265). (B) The GD-rich repeats and consensus sequences found in the C-terminal portion of RtxAVa. Gray highlights indicate the consensus repeat residues.
|
The cytotoxicity assay using ASK cells revealed that Vah1 and RtxAVa are both exotoxins and each has a distinct effect on ASK cells. Our data demonstrate that the culture supernatant from an overnight culture of S171 (the vah1 mutant) caused ASK cell rounding, while the culture supernatant from S123 (the rtxA mutant) caused ASK cell vacuolation (Fig. 6). Culture supernatants from M93Sm caused both rounding and vacuolation, while supernatants from S183 (the rtxA vah1 double mutant) had no effect on ASK cells. Previously, it was found that the HlyA hemolysin of V. cholerae causes vacuolation in many types of eukaryotic cells (10, 19, 38). HlyA shares strong homology (76%) with Vah1 of V. anguillarum. Chakraborty et al. (8) also indentified a cytotoxin in V. fluvialis which has 81% homology to HlyA of V. cholerae and also causes the vacuolation of HeLa cells. Taken together, the data strongly suggest that Vah1 of V. anguillarum M93Sm causes vacuolation of ASK cells. The data also suggest that the two hemolysins/cytotoxins Vah1 and RtxA have different mechanisms for cytotoxic activity and that the two toxins work synergistically to increase the cytotoxicity of M93Sm for ASK cells (Fig. 5A).
Our fish infection studies (Table 4) revealed that rtxA is a major contributor of virulence. Strains of V. anguillarum that lacked a functional rtxA gene were avirulent. In contrast, the vah1 mutant strain S171 exhibited no decrease in virulence compared to the wild-type strain M93Sm. These results are similar to those of Fullner et al. (21) for V. cholerae in which RtxA was found to be a major accessory toxin. However, the deletion of hlyA (a homologue of vah1) from V. cholerae did not affect virulence in the murine pulmonary model, but hlyA contributed predominately to the virulence in the adult mouse intestinal infection model, with rtxA playing a secondary role (39). In contrast, the Vvh toxin of V. vulnificus, also a homologue of Vah1, is thought to contribute directly to virulence by causing vasodilation and hypotensive septic shock (30). Our data clearly show that RtxAVa is a major virulence factor in fish infection by i.p. injection. Additionally, RtxAVa appears to have a strong cytotoxic effect against fish erythrocyte and macrophage cells (unpublished data). It will be interesting to discover whether RtxA plays a role during the initial invasion of the fish across the intestinal epithelium during infections of fish by immersion or anal intubation.
It is interesting to note that while rtx gene clusters in Vibrio species are highly conserved, retaining strong protein homologies and gene arrangements (Fig. 2 and Table 3), the flanking genes surrounding the rtx genes differ among V. cholerae, V. vulnificus, and V. anguillarum (Fig. 2). Lin et al. (32) demonstrated that the rtx operon in V. cholerae is adjacent to the CTX prophage and is considered part of a pathogenicity island. However, they also found that the 5' end of rtxA, all of rtxC, and the 5' end of rtxB were deleted in classical biotypes of V. cholerae. The authors suggested that the acquisition of the rtx operon predated the acquisition of the CTX element. In contrast, the rtx operons in both V. anguillarum and V. vulnificus are flanked by different sets of housekeeping genes and are not associated with obvious pathogenicity islands. The similarity of rtx operons and the distinct flanking sequences among Vibrio species suggests that the rtx operon was probably transferred horizontally between Vibrio species.
Rtx toxins are secreted by a TISS (6), which consists of an ATP-binding protein (i.e., RtxBVa and RtxEVa) and a membrane-fusion protein (RtxDVa). In V. anguillarum, the deduced amino acid sequences of the three secretion proteins (encoded by rtxBDEVa) of the rtx operon show high degrees of amino acid sequence similarity with other rtx operons. For example, for rtxBVa the deduced encoded protein sequence has a 63% similarity to that of E. coli HlyB and an 81% similarity to that of V. vulnificus RtxB (Table 3). Comparison of the rtx secretion genes from various bacterial species revealed an interesting difference among the secretion systems regarding the presence or absence of rtxE. We found, using BLASTx, that rtxE is broadly distributed among rtx operons that contain the larger versions of RtxA (>3,000 amino acid residues long), such as those found in Vibrio, Yersinia, and Aeromonas species (Table 3), while rtxE is not found in rtx operons with smaller RtxA proteins, such as those in E. coli, B. pertussis, and Pasteurella species. Boardman and Satchell (6) suggested that the secretion system containing rtxE is an atypical TISS and thought that RtxB and RtxE might form a heterodimer during the secretion of RtxA in V. cholerae. Our data suggest that a similar secretion mechanism exists in V. anguillarum. Furthermore, secretion of RtxA also requires an additional unlinked gene, tolC (5). However, we have not yet identified a tolC homologue in V. anguillarum M93Sm.
Finally, our data indicate that rtxC and rtxA are cotranscribed, as are rtxB, rtxD, and rtxE. We also found an rtxH homologue, which Liu et al. (33) demonstrated was cotranscribed with rtxC and rtxA in V. vulnificus. The regulation of rtx transcription by rtxH or other factors is currently under investigation.
Published ahead of print on 31 March 2008. ![]()
Present address: Cubist Pharmaceuticals, 65 Hayden Ave., Lexington, MA 02421. ![]()
|
|
|---|
This article has been cited by other articles:
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Copyright © 2009 by the American Society for Microbiology. For an alternate route to Journals.ASM.org, visit: http://intl-journals.asm.org | More Info»