Xanthan is an industrially important exopolysaccharide produced by the phytopathogenic, gram-negative bacterium Xanthomonas campestris pv. campestris. It is composed of polymerized pentasaccharide repeating units which are assembled by the sequential addition of glucose-1-phosphate, glucose, mannose, glucuronic acid, and mannose on a polyprenol phosphate carrier (L. Ielpi, R. O. Couso, and M. A. Dankert, J. Bacteriol. 175:2490–2500, 1993). A cluster of 12 genes in a region designated xpsI or gumhas been suggested to encode proteins involved in the synthesis and polymerization of the lipid intermediate. However, no experimental evidence supporting this suggestion has been published. In this work, from the biochemical analysis of a defined set of X. campestris gum mutants, we report experimental data for assigning functions to the products of the gum genes. We also show that the first step in the assembly of the lipid-linked intermediate is severely affected by the combination of certain gum and non-gum mutations. In addition, we provide evidence that the C-terminal domain of the gumD gene product is sufficient for its glucosyl-1-phosphate transferase activity. Finally, we found that alterations in the later stages of xanthan biosynthesis reduce the aggressiveness of X. campestris against the plant.
Serratia marcescens strains are ubiquitous bacteria isolated from environmental niches, such as soil, water, and air, and also constitute emergent nosocomial opportunistic pathogens. Among the numerous extracellular factors that S. marcescens is able to produce, the PhlA phospholipase is the only described exoprotein secreted by the flagellar apparatus while simultaneously being a member of the flagellar regulon. To gain insight into the regulatory mechanism that couples PhlA and flagellar expression, we conducted a generalized insertional mutagenesis and screened for PhlA-deficient strains. We found that three independent mutations in the wec cluster, which impaired the assembly of enterobacterial common antigen (ECA), provoked the inhibition of PhlA expression. Swimming and swarming assays showed that in these strains, motility was severely affected. Microscopic examination and flagellin immunodetection demonstrated that a strong defect in flagellum expression was responsible for the reduced motility in the wec mutant strains. Furthermore, we determined that in the ECA-defective strains, the transcriptional cascade that controls flagellar assembly was turned off due to the down-regulation of flhDC expression. These findings provide a new perspective on the physiological role of the ECA, providing evidence that in S. marcescens, its biosynthesis conditions the expression of the flagellar regulon.Serratia marcescens is an opportunistic human pathogen associated with urinary and respiratory tract as well as wound and eye infections, endocarditis, osteomyelitis, meningitis, and septicemia. Immunocompromised people and newborns are the most affected hosts. The incidence of S. marcescens infection has increased over the last years, mainly due to the acquisition of multiple antibiotic resistance (19,20). S. marcescens produces numerous extracellular factors, including hemolysin, esterase, DNase, chloroperoxidase, S-layer, lipases, proteases, chitinases, and siderophohore (21,24,26,27,31,38,44,45). These factors are predicted to play a role in bacterial environmental adaptive capacity, in either nonhost or host environments, contributing to its ambient persistence and to its pathogenic potential. In addition, an extracellular phospholipase named PhlA in Serratia liquefaciens MG1 (recently reclassified as S. marcescens MG1) and PlaA in Serratia sp. strain MK1 has been described previously (16, 48). The phlAB (or plaAS) locus codes for the PhlA (PlaA) phospholipase and for an accessory protein (PhlB/PlaS) that prevents the intracellular phospholipase enzymatic action. Interestingly, it has been shown not only that the phlAB promoter region displays homology to class III promoters of the flagellar transcriptional cascade controlled by the FliA sigma factor (15) but also that PhlA secretion depends on the integrity of the type III flagellar system export apparatus (15-17).The flagellar structure has its dedicated type III protein export embedded apparatus that translocates proteins involved in the self-assembly process an...
Oligosaccharyltransferases (OTases) are responsible for the transfer of carbohydrates from lipid carriers to acceptor proteins and are present in all domains of life. In bacteria, the most studied member of this family is PglB from Campylobacter jejuni (PglB(Cj)). This enzyme is functional in Escherichia coli and, contrary to its eukaryotic counterparts, has the ability to transfer a variety of oligo- and polysaccharides to protein carriers in vivo. Phylogenetic analysis revealed that in the delta proteobacteria Desulfovibrio sp., the PglB homolog is more closely related to eukaryotic and archaeal OTases than to its Campylobacter counterparts. Genetic analysis revealed the presence of a putative operon that might encode all enzymes required for N-glycosylation in Desulfovibrio desulfuricans. D. desulfuricans PglB (PglB(Dd)) was cloned and successfully expressed in E. coli, and its activity was confirmed by transferring the C. jejuni heptasaccharide onto the model protein acceptor AcrA. In contrast to PglB(Cj), which adds two glycan chains to AcrA, a single oligosaccharide was attached to the protein by PglB(Dd). Site-directed mutagenesis of the five putative N-X-S/T glycosylation sites in AcrA and mass spectrometry analysis showed that PglB(Dd) does not recognize the "conventional bacterial glycosylation sequon" consisting of the sequence D/E-X(1)-N-X(2)-S/T (where X(1) and X(2) are any amino acid except proline), and instead used a different site for the attachment of the oligosaccharide than PglB(Cj.). Furthermore, PglB(Dd) exhibited relaxed glycan specificity, being able to transfer mono- and polysaccharides to AcrA. Our analysis constitutes the first characterization of an OTase from delta-proteobacteria involved in N-linked protein glycosylation.
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