c Lactobacillus rhamnosus GG is one of the best-characterized lactic acid bacteria and can be considered a probiotic paradigm. Comparative and functional genome analysis showed that L. rhamnosus GG harbors a genomic island including the spaCBAsrtC1 gene cluster, encoding the cell surface-decorating host-interacting pili. Here, induced mutagenesis was used to study pilus biogenesis in L. rhamnosus GG. A combination of two powerful approaches, mutation selection and next-generation sequencing, was applied to L. rhamnosus GG for the selection of pilus-deficient mutants from an enriched population. The isolated mutants were first screened by immuno-dot blot analysis using antiserum against pilin proteins. Relevant mutants were selected, and the lack of pili was confirmed by immunoelectron microscopy. The pilosotype of 10 mutant strains was further characterized by analyzing pilin expression using Western blot, dot blot, and immunofluorescence methods. A mucus binding assay showed that the mutants did not adhere to porcine intestinal mucus. Comparative genome sequence analysis using the Illumina MiSeq platform allowed us to determine the nature of the mutations in the obtained pilus-deficient derivatives. Three major classes of mutants with unique genotypes were observed: class I, with mutations in the srtC1 gene; class II, with a deletion containing the spaCBA-srtC1 gene cluster; and class III, with mutations in the spaA gene. Only a limited number of collateral mutations were observed, and one of the pilus-deficient derivatives with a deficient srtC1 gene contained 24 other mutations. This strain, PB12, can be considered a candidate for human trials addressing the impact of the absence of pili.
Lactobacillus rhamnosus GG is one of the best-studied lactic acid bacteria and is marketed worldwide in probiotic products (1, 2). Initially, it was isolated from the intestine of a healthy female subject (3), and ever since, it has been used in various large and well-controlled probiotic trials that showed positive effects, i.e., symptom alleviation or inhibition of disease onset, on respiratory tract infections (4), atopic disease in children (5, 6), and also various types of diarrhea (7).The genome of L. rhamnosus GG has recently been sequenced and was found to contain a genomic island harboring a functional gene cluster coding for proteinaceous pili that are decorated by the mucus binding SpaC protein (8). The pili, located at the cell surface, were further studied and found to consist of polymers containing the major subunit SpaA and the minor pilins SpaB and SpaC (9). The major pilin SpaA forms the pilus shaft, while the minor pilin SpaB decorates the shaft and is supposedly also located at the base of the pilus structure, where it is involved in arresting pilus biosynthesis and the docking of the pilus into the peptidoglycan. The latter reaction involves the activity of the housekeeping sortase SrtA (10), and we have recently provided evidence for the involvement of the pilus-specific srtC1 gene product in the specifi...