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1.
Microbiology (Reading) ; 155(Pt 8): 2509-2521, 2009 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19443541

ABSTRACT

Cells of wild-type Yersinia pestis exhibit a low-calcium response (LCR) defined as bacteriostasis with expression of a pCD-encoded type III secretion system (T3SS) during cultivation at 37 degrees C without added Ca(2+) versus vegetative growth with downregulation of the T3SS with Ca(2+) (>or=2.5 mM). Bacteriostasis is known to reflect cumulative toxicity of Na(+), l-glutamic acid and culture pH; control of these variables enables full-scale growth ('rescue') in the absence of Ca(2+). Several T3SS regulatory proteins modulate the LCR, because their absence promotes a Ca(2+)-blind phenotype in which growth at 37 degrees C ceases and the T3SS is constitutive even with added Ca(2+). This study analysed the connection between the LCR and Ca(2+) by determining the response of selected Ca(2+)-blind mutants grown in Ca(2+)-deficient rescue media containing Na(+) plus l-glutamate (pH 5.5), where the T3SS is not expressed, l-glutamate alone (pH 6.5), where l-aspartate is fully catabolized, and Na(+) alone (pH 9.0), where the electrogenic sodium pump NADH : ubiquinone oxidoreductase becomes activated. All three conditions supported essentially full-scale Ca(2+)-independent growth at 37 degrees C of wild-type Y. pestis as well as lcrG and yopN mutants (possessing a complete but dysregulated T3SS), indicating that bacteriostasis reflects a Na(+)-dependent lesion in bioenergetics. In contrast, mutants lacking the negative regulator YopD or the YopD chaperone (LcrH) failed to grow in any rescue medium and are therefore truly temperature-sensitive. The Ca(2+)-blind yopD phenotype was fully suppressed in a Ca(2+)-independent background lacking the injectisome-associated inner-membrane component YscV but not peripheral YscK, suggesting that the core translocon energizes YopD.


Subject(s)
Calcium/metabolism , Temperature , Yersinia pestis/growth & development , Yersinia pestis/metabolism , Bacterial Outer Membrane Proteins/metabolism , Bacterial Proteins/metabolism , Gene Deletion , Glutamic Acid/metabolism , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration , Membrane Proteins/metabolism , Molecular Chaperones/metabolism , Pore Forming Cytotoxic Proteins/metabolism , Secretory Pathway , Sodium/metabolism , Yersinia pestis/genetics
2.
Microbiology (Reading) ; 155(Pt 1): 198-209, 2009 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19118360

ABSTRACT

It is established that Yersinia pestis, the causative agent of bubonic plague, recently evolved from enteropathogenic Yersinia pseudotuberculosis by undergoing chromosomal degeneration while acquiring two unique plasmids that facilitate tissue invasion (pPCP) and dissemination by fleabite (pMT). Thereafter, plague bacilli spread from central Asia to sylvatic foci throughout the world. These epidemic isolates exhibit a broad host range including man as opposed to enzootic (pestoides) variants that remain in ancient reservoirs where infection is limited to muroid rodents. Cells of Y. pseudotuberculosis are known to express glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (Zwf) and aspartase (AspA); these activities are not detectable in epidemic Y. pestis due to missense mutations (substitution of proline for serine at amino position 155 of Zwf and leucine for valine at position 363 of AspA). In this study, functional Zwf was found in pestoides strains E, F and G but not seven other enzootic isolates; enzymic activity was associated with retention of serine at amino acid position 155. Essentially, full AspA activity occurred in pestoides isolates where valine (pestoides A, B, C and D) or serine (pestoides E, F, G and I) occupied position 363. Reduced activity occurred in strains Angola and A16, which contained phenylalanine at this position. The kcat but not Km of purified AspA from strain Angola was significantly reduced. In this context, aspA of the recently described attenuated enzootic microtus biovar encodes active valine at position 363, further indicating that functional AspA is a biomarker for avirulence of Y. pestis in man.


Subject(s)
Aspartate Ammonia-Lyase/genetics , Aspartate Ammonia-Lyase/metabolism , Rodentia/microbiology , Yersinia pestis/enzymology , Yersinia pestis/pathogenicity , Animals , Disease Outbreaks , Glucosephosphate Dehydrogenase/genetics , Glucosephosphate Dehydrogenase/metabolism , Humans , Plague/epidemiology , Plague/microbiology , Rodent Diseases/microbiology , Virulence , Yersinia Infections/microbiology , Yersinia Infections/veterinary , Yersinia pestis/classification , Yersinia pestis/isolation & purification , Yersinia pseudotuberculosis/enzymology
3.
Microbiology (Reading) ; 154(Pt 5): 1271-1280, 2008 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18451035

ABSTRACT

It is established that cells of Yersinia pestis, the causative agent of bubonic plague, excrete l-aspartic acid at the expense of exogenous l-glutamic acid during expression of the low-calcium response. Results of enzymic analysis provided here suggest that a previously defined deficiency of aspartase (AspA) accounts for this phenomenon rather than an elevated oxaloacetate pool. The only known distinction between most sequenced isolates of aspA from Y. pestis and the active gene in Yersinia pseudotuberculosis (the immediate progenitor of Y. pestis) is a single base transversion (G.C-->T.A) causing replacement of leucine (encoded by UUG) for valine (encoded by GUG) at amino acid position 363. The gene from Y. pestis KIM possesses a unique second transversion (G.C-->T.A) at amino acid 146 causing substitution of aspartic acid (encoded by GAU) with tyrosine (encoded by UAU). We show in this study that Y. pestis expresses aspA as cross-reacting immunological material (CRIM). Functional and inactive aspA of Y. pseudotuberculosis PB1 and Y. pestis KIM, respectively, were then cloned and expressed in AspA-deficient Escherichia coli. After purification to near homogeneity, the products were subjected to biochemical analysis and found to exhibit similar secondary, tertiary and quaternary (tetrameric) structures as well as comparable Michaelis constants for l-aspartic acid. However, the k(cat) of the Y. pestis CRIM of strain KIM is only about 0.1 % of that determined for the active AspA of Y. pseudotuberculosis. Return of valine for leucine at position 363 of the Y. pestis enzyme restored normal turnover (k(cat) 86+/-2 s(-1)) provided that the amino acid substitution at position 146 was also reversed. These observations have important implications for understanding the nature of the stringent low-calcium response of Y. pestis and its role in promoting acute disease.


Subject(s)
Aspartate Ammonia-Lyase/genetics , Aspartate Ammonia-Lyase/metabolism , Mutation, Missense , Yersinia pestis/enzymology , Amino Acid Sequence , Amino Acid Substitution/genetics , Aspartate Ammonia-Lyase/chemistry , Aspartate Ammonia-Lyase/isolation & purification , Aspartic Acid/metabolism , Circular Dichroism , Cloning, Molecular , Escherichia coli/genetics , Glutamic Acid/metabolism , Kinetics , Models, Molecular , Molecular Sequence Data , Mutagenesis, Site-Directed , Protein Conformation , Sequence Alignment , Yersinia pestis/genetics , Yersinia pseudotuberculosis/enzymology , Yersinia pseudotuberculosis/genetics
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