| Literature DB >> 24317402 |
Cerith Jones1, Abderrahman Hachani, Eleni Manoli, Alain Filloux.
Abstract
The type VI secretion system (T6SS) of Gram-negative bacteria has been involved in various processes, notably bacterial competition and eukaryotic cell subversion. Most Pseudomonas aeruginosa strains possess three T6SS gene clusters, but only the function of the first T6SS (H1-T6SS) has been clearly elucidated. It is involved in the secretion of three toxins (Tse1 to -3) that target bacterial competitors. In the case of the H2- and H3-T6SS, no clear function has been assigned, and only one effector has been associated with these systems. Yet the H2-T6SS was proposed to promote P. aeruginosa internalization in nonphagocytic epithelial cells. Although the H2-T6SS genetic organization is conserved across P. aeruginosa isolates, one feature is the presence of an additional transcriptional unit in the PA14 strain H2-T6SS cluster, which is divergent from the core H2-T6SS genes. A specific set of four genes encodes an Hcp protein (Hcp2), a VgrG protein (VgrG14), an Rhs element (PA14_43100 or RhsP2), and a protein with no homologies with previously characterized proteins (PA14_43090). In this study, we engineered a P. aeruginosa PA14 strain carrying an arabinose-inducible H2-T6SS on the chromosome. We showed that arabinose induction readily promotes assembly of the H2-T6SS, as seen by monitoring Hcp2 secretion. We further studied the secretion fate of VgrG14 and RhsP2, but these were not detectable in the extracellular medium. We finally investigated whether activation of the PA14 H2-T6SS gene cluster could influence phenotypic traits such as internalization in eukaryotic cells, and we reported noteworthy differences compared to strain PAO1, which may be accounted for by the described genetic differences.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 24317402 PMCID: PMC3911176 DOI: 10.1128/JB.00863-13
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Bacteriol ISSN: 0021-9193 Impact factor: 3.490
Bacterial strains and plasmids used in this study
| Strain or plasmid | Description | Source or reference |
|---|---|---|
| Strains | ||
| | ||
| PA14 | Wild-type | Laboratory collection |
| PAO1 | Wild-type | Laboratory collection |
| PAO1 Δ | PAO1 | |
| PAO1 ΔH2-T6SS | PAO1 carrying a deletion of the H2-T6SS genes from mid- | This study |
| PA14-DP | PA14 carrying divergent arabinose-inducible pBAD promoters upstream of | This study |
| PA14-DP ΔH2 | PA14-DP strain carrying a deletion of the H2-T6SS genes from mid- | This study |
| PA14-DP Δ | PA14-DP strain carrying a clean deletion of | This study |
| PA14-DP | PA14-DP producing a V5-His6-tagged version of VgrG14 (PA14_43080) following the chromosomal introduction of the required sequence | This study |
| PA14-DP | PA14-DP producing a V5-His6-tagged version of RhsP2 (PA14_43100) following the chromosomal introduction of the required sequence | This study |
| PAK | Wild-type | Laboratory collection |
| PA14:: | PA14 carrying a transposon insertion in PA14_42350 ( | |
| PA14 Δ | PA14 with a clean deletion of PA14_42350 | This study |
| PA14 Δ | PA14 with a clean deletion of PA14_42350 and deletion of the H2-T6SS cluster | This study |
| PA14 Δ | PA14 Δ | This study |
| PA14-DP Δ | PA14-DP producing a V5-His6-tagged version of VgrG14 in a Δ | This study |
| PA14-DP Δ | PA14-DP producing a V5-His6-tagged version of RhsP2 in a Δ | This study |
| | ||
| One-Shot TOP10 | Host strain for pCR2.1 derivatives | Invitrogen |
| CC118 λ | Host strain for pKNG101 replication | Laboratory collection |
| 1047 | Carries conjugative plasmid pRK2013 for mobilization of pKNG from CC118 into | |
| BL21(DE3) | Host strain for pET28a derivatives | Laboratory collection |
| Plasmids | ||
| pKNG ΔH2-T6SS | pKNG101 suicide vector for deletion of H2-T6SS (mid- | This study |
| pKNG Δ | pKNG101 suicide vector for deletion of | This study |
| pKNG Δ | pKNG101 suicide vector for deletion of | This study |
| pKNG ΔH2 promoter | pKNG101 suicide vector for deletion or insertion into the H2-T6SS promoter region | This study |
| pKNG Δ | pKNG101 suicide vector for deletion or insertion into the stop codon of | This study |
| pKNG Δ | pKNG101 suicide vector for deletion or insertion into the stop codon of | This study |
| pCR2.1- | Cloning vector containing the pBAD | |
| pCR2.1-pBAD | Cloning vector containing divergent pBAD promoter regions interspaced by a single copy of the | This study |
| pCR2.1 v5-hisx6 | Cloning vector containing the V5-His-6 sequence from pDEST42 | This study |
| pET28a | Plasmid for overexpression of His-tagged HsiB2 | This study |
| pDEST42- | Plasmid for overexpression of PA1512 (HcpA), identical to Hcp2 | This study |
Cloning primers used in this work
| Primer purpose and ID | Function or target | Sequence (5′–3′) |
|---|---|---|
| Divergent promoter engineering | ||
| OAL771 | 5′ pBAD region duplication | GGAATTCCATATGTCAGAGAAGAAACCAATTGTCCATATTG |
| OAL772 | 3′ pBAD region duplication | GGAATTCCATATGAAAACGGGTATGGAGAAACAGTAGAG |
| OAL601 | 5′ region upstream of H2-T6SS promoter | GGGCCCGATCGGTACGTTCTCGT |
| OAL586 | 3′ region upstream of H2-T6SS promoter | GCAGCTAGCTTTCATATGGTTAAGATATTCATTGGCGCAC |
| OAL587 | 5′ region downstream of H2-T6SS promoter | AACCATATGAAAGCTAGCTGCGAGGGGTGGTCCAACC |
| OAL588 | 3′ region downstream of H2-T6SS promoter | ACTAGTTCGTCGGAGCCGGAG |
| OAL589 | 5′ region outside H2-T6SS promoter | CTTCAGCCACCAGGCG |
| OAL590 | 3′ region outside H2-T6SS promoter | CTGCCTGGCGCGGG |
| OAL591 | pBAD promoter screening primer | CGCGTAACAAAAGTGTC |
| Cloning of V5-His6 region | ||
| OAL599 | 5′ V5-His6 coding region | GCTAGCCCATTCGAAGCTTGAAGGTAAGCCTAT |
| OAL600 | 3′ V5-His6 coding region | GCTAGCTCAATGGTGATGGTGATGATGACC |
| Mutation of | ||
| OAL602 | 5′ region upstream of | CACCAACGCCACGACACC |
| OAL597 | 3′ region upstream of | TTTGCTAGCTTTGGGAGGTCACAGGCACCGTC |
| OAL598 | 5′ region downstream of | CCAAAGCTAGCAAACGCCCTCTCCCCGCG |
| OAL603 | 3′ region downstream of | CTTGCACTTCTCGCACTC |
| OAL808 | 5′ region outside | GCTACAACGAGCTGCGCATCGAGG |
| OAL809 | 3′ region outside | GCAGGTTGTCGATAGCGGTAGTCG |
| Mutation of | ||
| OAL1136 | 5′ region upstream of | AATAAAACTCGCTGTCCCGAAGCATTAG |
| OAL1137 | 3′ region upstream of | CATGAGTTTTCTGCTAGCGGGTCTATTACTTCGAAGTCTATTAGGTTCTTGTTG |
| OAL1138 | 5′ region downstream of | GAAGTAATAGACCCGCTAGCAGAAAACTCATGAAAACCATTTATAACTTCAAACAGCG |
| OAL1139 | 3′ region downstream of | TTCATTTGCTTCTGTCTTTTGGTTTTTTATATAACC |
| OAL1160 | 5′ region outside | CGGGACGCTACCTGACCCCC |
| OAL1161 | 3′ region outside | GATGCGTGAACTTCCTGAGCCAGG |
| OAL1171 | 5′ | GCCATATGGCCAAAGAAGGCTCGGTAGCC |
| OAL1172 | 3′ | GCCTCGAGGGCGTCCTGGGAGGGGGC |
| Deletion of | ||
| OAL1389 | 5′ region upstream of | ACGCAACCTGTGCCAGGCACAGG |
| OAL1399 | 3′ region upstream of | CTAATTCCCGCGGCGCATCAGGGACGCC |
| OAL1400 | 5′ region downstream of | ATGCGCCGCGGGAATTAGCATGGCCTGGAAGATCC |
| OAL1401 | 3′ region downstream of | TAGGCGCGCACCCTCGCC |
| OAL1484 | 5′ region outside | GAGGTCCTCGAATGCCTCTGG |
| OAL1485 | 3′ region outside | TTGTCCTCCAGGTAGCCGCC |
| Deletion of H2-T6SS (mid- | ||
| OAL996 | 5′ region upstream of H2-T6SS | GACTGGTTGAAAATCCTGGAAAAC |
| OAL997 | 3′ region upstream of H2-T6SS | TCAGGCGAACGGCCTCCTGCTGGGCGC |
| OAL998 | 5′ region downstream of H2-T6SS | AGGAGGCCGTTCGCCTGAGGTGGGTGC |
| OAL999 | 3′ region downstream of H2-T6SS | CAACACGGTATAGGGGTTGTG |
| OAL1000 | 5′ region outside H2-T6SS | GAATTGTTAAGATATTCATTGGCGCAC |
| OAL1001 | 3′ region outside H2-T6SS | TCGAGCAGCAGGGTTCCGCCATCCGCG |
| Deletion of | ||
| OAL1900 | 5′ region upstream of | AGGTCTTCGACAAGGCCTCGCCG |
| OAL1901 | 3′ region upstream of | TGTTTGAAGCCGTTGTCCCTCACTGGCGCAG |
| OAL1902 | 5′ region downstream of | GGACAACGGCTTCAAACAGCGTATCAAAGAAGACCCCG |
| OAL1903 | 3′ region downstream of | TATGATTCCCATGGATAGGGGGTTTTCATTTGC |
| OAL1984 | 5′ region outside | TACCAGGAAGGCCACGAG |
| OAL1985 | 3′ region outside | CCCATGGATAGGGGGTTT |
| Deletion of | ||
| OAL346 | 5′ region upstream of | CTTCTTCGAAACCTACATGCG |
| OAL347 | 3′ region upstream of | TCATTGGCTGCGTTGCATCAGAGCTGC |
| OAL348 | 5′ region downstream of | ATGCAACGCAGCCAATGAACGAACCGC |
| OAL349 | 3′ region downstream of | CGTGGACGTAGGCCAGAA |
| OAL350 | 5′ region outside | TACCTGTATCTCAACCAGCGC |
| OAL351 | 3′ region outside | CAAGCGGGACAAGATGTTAAT |
qPCR primers used in this work
| Primer ID | Direction | Target gene | Sequence (5′–3′) |
|---|---|---|---|
| OAL920 | Forward | CCGCTGGTAGCATTGAAGCT | |
| OAL921 | Reverse | GGCGAACTCGCTATAGAGCAA | |
| OAL922 | Forward | GTGTTCGCTTCGGTTCTGAAC | |
| OAL923 | Reverse | GTGCTCCTCACCCGCAACT | |
| OAL924 | Forward | ACTACGGGTTGCCCGATCTC | |
| OAL925 | Reverse | GGTTCGTAAGCCTCGATGAAAC | |
| OAL926 | Forward | PA14_43090 | GCCGTCACCTGCTACCGATA |
| OAL927 | Reverse | PA14_43090 | GATCAGGTAACGGCCGAACA |
| OAL928 | Forward | GACAAGGACGCCAACATCCT | |
| OAL929 | Reverse | CGAAAGTATGCAGCAGTTTCAGTT | |
| OAL511 | Forward | GGTTGACCTGGGCCCTCTAC | |
| OAL512 | Reverse | GATGGATCTCGACCCAATGC | |
| OAL540 | Forward | CCAAGGTCGAGATCCAGTGGTA | |
| OAL541 | Reverse | GTAGTCCTTGATGTCGACGATGAT | |
| OAL542 | Forward | TCACCCCGGCCCAGAT | |
| OAL543 | Reverse | TCTCGCACTCTTCGCAGAAG | |
| OAL820 | Forward | AGGCCGTGAGCAGGGATAC | |
| OAL821 | Reverse | TCCCCATGTCGTTGATCATG | |
| OAL538 | Forward | GCCCGAAGGGTGAGGAA | |
| OAL539 | Reverse | CTCGCGATCCCAGTGGAAT | |
| OAL536 | Forward | GGAGCCGGGAAAGACGTT | |
| OAL537 | Reverse | AGGCTTCCCCGAACTCGTT | |
| OAL721 | Forward | CCTTCAGCCATCCGTTCTTCT | |
| OAL722 | Reverse | TCGCGTACGAAGTCGACCTT | |
| OAL822 | Forward | GGCACGCAATGCCTTGAT | |
| OAL823 | Reverse | GCAGATGTCGAAGAAGGTGATG |
FIG 1Organization of the H1- and H2-T6SS clusters in P. aeruginosa. The H1-T6SS cluster (A) and two variations of the H2-T6SS cluster, from PAO1 and PA14 (B), are shown for comparison. Arrows represent the orientations of open reading frames. hsiA, highlighted in blue, is conserved across the H1- and H2-T6SSs, as are the majority of the core T6SS genes (white arrows). Two genes encoding key structural components of the T6SS are shown in green (vgrG) and yellow (hcp). rhsP2, a gene specific to the H2-T6SS from PA14, is shown in red. Genes encoding serine-threonine kinases/phosphatases are shown in purple. These are known to be involved in posttranslational control of the H1-T6SS (ppkA and pppA) and are conserved in the H2-T6SS (stp2 and stk2). Genes not related to the T6SS at the boundary of the H2-T6SS cluster are shaded in gray. The core H2-T6SS cluster is conserved in PAO1 and PA14, but four additional genes which are absent in PAO1 are present in the PA14 genome, at the location indicated by the vertical line. The hatched box indicates the region removed in the construction of a ΔH2-T6SS mutant strain. PA numbers are included for the first and last genes in each cluster.
FIG 2Artificial induction of the H2-T6SS through the introduction of arabinose-inducible promoters. (A) The H2-T6SS promoter region was replaced with two divergently acting pBAD promoters (curved arrows) and a single copy of the araC regulatory gene. Following two events of homologous recombination of a suitably designed mutator plasmid, using the pKNG suicide vector, the PA14-DP (divergent promoter) strain was generated. (B to D) The activity of the promoters was tested by qRT-PCR. The expression of various H2-T6SS genes was tested in wild-type PA14 (white bars), uninduced PA14-DP (gray bars), and PA14-DP induced with 2% arabinose (black bars). Fold changes of gene expression in the induced or uninduced divergent promoter strain are shown relative to the expression in the PA14 wild-type strain, which was set at 1.0. (B) Expression of genes carried in the core PA14 H2-T6SS cluster; (C) expression of genes carried adjacent to the H2-T6SS cluster in PA14; (D) expression of genes carried outside the H2-T6SS cluster, including replication of the expression of hsiA2 as a positive control. Error bars show the standard deviations for three replicates. (E) Western blot analysis of the production of H2-T6SS proteins from whole-cell extracts of PA14 and the PA14-DP derivative. Blots were probed with anti-Hcp2 (top) or anti-HsiB2 (bottom), and the expected sizes of these proteins are indicated to the right of the blots. The strains tested are indicated above the blots, while concentrations of glucose (Glu) and arabinose (Ara), used to repress and induce the pBAD promoters, respectively, are indicated below the blots. Molecular size markers are indicated to the left. WT, wild type.
FIG 3H2-T6SS-dependent secretion of Hcp2. Western blot analysis was performed on whole-cell extracts (cells) and supernatants (S/N) from PA14-DP and PA14-DP with a clean deletion in the H2-T6SS cluster (PA14-DP ΔH2; the hatched box in Fig. 1 indicates the region deleted in this strain). Blots were probed with either anti-Hcp2 (top) or anti-RNA polymerase (RNAP) (bottom) antibody, and the expected positions of these proteins are indicated on the right. The strains tested are indicated at the top, and the sample types are indicated below the blots. Molecular size standards are indicated on the left.
FIG 4Phylogenetic analysis of P. aeruginosa VgrG proteins. VgrG amino acid sequences from P. aeruginosa PAO1 and PA14 were compared at www.phylogeny.fr. A graphical representation of the inferred tree is shown. The position of the PA14-specific VgrG14 protein is indicated by the gray arrow.
FIG 5V5-tagged VgrG14 and RhsP2 proteins are produced but not secreted. Western blots were performed on whole-cell extracts (cells) and supernatants (S/N) of the indicated strains. (A and B) PA14-DP strains carrying chromosomally tagged versions of vgrG14 (A) and rhsP2 (B). Upper blots were probed with anti-Hcp2, central blots with anti-V5, and lower blots with anti-Hcp2. (C) Effect of stp2 deletion on Hcp2 secretion. Western blotting was performed on PA14-DP and the isogenic PA14-DP Δstp2 mutant; the upper blot was probed with anti-RNAP and the lower blot with anti-Hcp2. (D and E) Western blots performed on PA14-DP Δstp2 strains carrying a chromosomally tagged version of either vgrG14 (D) or rhsP2 (E). Upper blots were probed with anti-V5 antibody, central blots with anti-RNAP antibody, and lower blots with anti-LasB (secreted control). Molecular size standards are indicated to the left, and the expected position of each protein is indicated on the right. The presence or absence of arabinose is indicated below each blot.
FIG 6The H2-T6SS of PA14 inhibits bacterial internalization in HeLa cells. (A) Relative internalization in HeLa cells of the isogenic mutant strains PAO1 ΔclpV2 and PAO1 lacking the core H2-T6SS cluster, including clpV2 (PAO1 ΔH2-T6SS), compared to that of the parental strain PAO1. (B) Relative internalization of the noncytotoxic parental strain (PA14 ΔpscC) compared to that of isogenic mutants carrying deletions in the H2-T6SS cluster (PA414 ΔpscC ΔH2-T6SS) or deletion of the vgrG14-rhsP2 region (PA14 ΔpscC ΔvgrG14-rhsP2). (C) The relative internalization of a noncytotoxic PA14 strain carrying an arabinose-inducible H2-T6SS (PA14-DP ΔpscC) is shown with and without arabinose induction (+ara) and compared to the internalization of the parental strain, PA14 ΔpscC. In all cases, the internalization of mutants is shown relative to the level exhibited by the corresponding parental strain (set to 1.0). The strain tested is indicated below each bar. Error bars show standard deviations, and the results shown are representative of three different experiments. Statistically significant differences compared to the corresponding parental strain are indicated as follows: *, P < 0.05; and ***, P < 0.01 (Student's t test).