Achromobacter xylosoxidans is increasingly recognized as a colonizer of cystic fibrosis (CF) patients, but the role that A. xylosoxidans plays in pathology remains unknown. This knowledge gap is largely due to the lack of model systems available to study the toxic potential of this bacterium. Recently, a phospholipase A2 (PLA2) encoded by a majority of A. xylosoxidans genomes, termed AxoU, was identified. Here, we show that AxoU is a type III secretion system (T3SS) substrate that induces cytotoxicity to mammalian cells. A tissue culture model was developed showing that a subset of A. xylosoxidans isolates from CF patients induce cytotoxicity in macrophages, suggestive of a pathogenic or inflammatory role in the CF lung. In a toxic strain, cytotoxicity is correlated with transcriptional activation of axoU and T3SS genes, demonstrating that this model can be used as a tool to identify and track expression of virulence determinants produced by this poorly understood bacterium.
ExoU is a type III-secreted cytotoxin expressing A phospholipase activity when injected into eukaryotic target cells by the bacterium The enzymatic activity of ExoU is undetectable in vitro unless ubiquitin, a required cofactor, is added to the reaction. The role of ubiquitin in facilitating ExoU enzymatic activity is poorly understood but of significance for designing inhibitors to prevent tissue injury during infections with strains of producing this toxin. Most ubiquitin-binding proteins, including ExoU, demonstrate a low (micromolar) affinity for monoubiquitin (monoUb). Additionally, ExoU is a large and dynamic protein, limiting the applicability of traditional structural techniques such as NMR and X-ray crystallography to define this protein-protein interaction. Recent advancements in computational methods, however, have allowed high-resolution protein modeling using sparse data. In this study, we combine double electron-electron resonance (DEER) spectroscopy and Rosetta modeling to identify potential binding interfaces of ExoU and monoUb. The lowest-energy scoring model was tested using biochemical, biophysical, and biological techniques. To verify the binding interface, Rosetta was used to design a panel of mutations to modulate binding, including one variant with enhanced binding affinity. Our analyses show the utility of computational modeling when combined with sensitive biological assays and biophysical approaches that are exquisitely suited for large dynamic proteins.
Transmembrane Ser/Thr kinases containing extracellular PASTA (penicillin-binding protein [PBP] and Ser/Thr-associated) domains are ubiquitous among Actinobacteria and Firmicutes species. Such PASTA kinases regulate critical bacterial processes, including antibiotic resistance, cell division, cell envelope homeostasis, and virulence, and are sometimes essential for viability. Previous studies of purified PASTA kinase fragments revealed they are capable of autophosphorylation in vitro, typically at multiple sites on the kinase domain. Autophosphorylation of a specific structural element of the kinase known as the activation loop is thought to enhance kinase activity in response to stimuli. However, the role of kinase phosphorylation at other sites is largely unknown. Moreover, the mechanisms by which PASTA kinases are deactivated once their stimulus has diminished are poorly understood. Enterococcus faecalis is a Gram-positive intestinal bacterium and a major antibiotic-resistant opportunistic pathogen. In E. faecalis, the PASTA kinase IreK drives intrinsic resistance to cell wall-active antimicrobials, and such antimicrobials trigger enhanced phosphorylation of IreK in vivo. Here we identify multiple sites of phosphorylation on IreK and evaluate their function in vivo and in vitro. While phosphorylation of the IreK activation loop is required for kinase activity, we found that phosphorylation at a site distinct from the activation loop reciprocally modulates IreK activity in vivo, leading to diminished activity (and diminished antimicrobial resistance). Moreover, this site is important for deactivation of IreK in vivo upon removal of an activating stimulus. Our results are consistent with a model in which phosphorylation of IreK at distinct sites reciprocally regulates IreK activity in vivo to promote adaptation to cell wall stresses. IMPORTANCE Transmembrane Ser/Thr kinases containing extracellular PASTA domains are ubiquitous among Actinobacteria and Firmicutes species and regulate critical processes, including antibiotic resistance, cell division, and cell envelope homeostasis. Previous studies of PASTA kinase fragments revealed autophosphorylation at multiple sites. However, the functional role of autophosphorylation and the relative impacts of phosphorylation at distinct sites are poorly understood. The PASTA kinase of Enterococcus faecalis, IreK, regulates intrinsic resistance to antimicrobials. Here we identify multiple sites of phosphorylation on IreK and show that modification of IreK at distinct sites reciprocally regulates IreK activity and antimicrobial resistance in vivo. Thus, these results provide new insights into the mechanisms by which PASTA kinases can regulate critical physiological processes in a wide variety of bacterial species.
The human gastrointestinal tract (GIT) is inhabited by a dense microbial community of symbionts. Enterococci are among the earliest members of this community and remain core members of the GIT microbiota throughout life. Enterococci have also recently emerged as opportunistic pathogens and major causes of nosocomial infections. Although recognized as a prerequisite for infection, colonization of the GIT by enterococci remains poorly understood. One way that bacteria adapt to dynamic ecosystems like the GIT is through the use of their surface proteins to sense and interact with components of their immediate environment. In Grampositive bacteria, a subset of surface proteins relies on an enzyme called sortase for covalent attachment to the cell wall. Here, we show that the housekeeping sortase A (SrtA) enzyme promotes intestinal colonization by enterococci. Furthermore, we show that the enzymatic activity of SrtA is key to the ability of Enterococcus faecalis to bind mucin (a major component of the GIT mucus). We also report the GIT colonization phenotypes of E. faecalis mutants lacking selected sortase-dependent proteins (SDPs). Further examination of the mucin binding ability of these mutants suggests that adhesion to mucin contributes to intestinal colonization by E. faecalis.
ExoU is a potent type III secretion system effector that is injected directly into mammalian cells by the opportunistic pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa. As a ubiquitin-activated phospholipase A2 (PLA2), ExoU exhibits cytotoxicity by cleaving membrane phospholipids, resulting in lysis of the host cells and inhibition of the innate immune response. Recently, ExoU has been established as a model protein for a group of ubiquitin-activated PLA2 enzymes encoded by a variety of bacteria. Bioinformatic analyses of homologous proteins is a powerful approach that can complement and enhance the overall understanding of protein structure and function. To conduct homology studies, it is important to have efficient and effective tools to screen and to validate the putative homologs of interest. Here we make use of an Escherichia coli-based dual expression system to screen putative ubiquitin-activated PLA2 enzymes from a variety of bacteria that are known to colonize humans and to cause human infections. The screen effectively identified multiple ubiquitin-activated phospholipases, which were validated using both biological and biochemical techniques. In this study, two new ExoU orthologs were identified and the ubiquitin activation of the rickettsial enzyme RP534 was verified. Conversely, ubiquitin was not found to regulate the activity of several other tested enzymes. Based on structural homology analyses, functional properties were predicted for AxoU, a unique member of the group expressed by Achromobacter xylosoxidans. IMPORTANCE Bacterial phospholipases act as intracellular and extracellular enzymes promoting the destruction of phospholipid barriers and inflammation during infections. Identifying enzymes with a common mechanism of activation is an initial step in understanding structural and functional properties. These properties serve as critical information for the design of specific inhibitors to reduce enzymatic activity and ameliorate host cell death. In this study, we identify and verify cytotoxic PLA2 enzymes from several bacterial pathogens. Similar to the founding member of the group, ExoU, these enzymes share the property of ubiquitin-mediated activation. The identification and validation of potential toxins from multiple bacterial species provide additional proteins from which to derive structural insights that could lead to paninhibitors useful for treating a variety of infections.
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