| Literature DB >> 27764198 |
Julia I Tandberg1,2, Leidy X Lagos1,2, Petter Langlete1,2, Eva Berger2,3, Anne-Lise Rishovd2, Norbert Roos3, Deepa Varkey4, Ian T Paulsen4, Hanne C Winther-Larsen1,2.
Abstract
Membrane vesicles (MVs) are spherical particles naturally released from the membrane of Gram-negative bacteria. Bacterial MV production is associated with a range of phenotypes including biofilm formation, horizontal gene transfer, toxin delivery, modulation of host immune responses and virulence. This study reports comparative profiling of MVs from bacterial strains isolated from three widely disperse geographical areas. Mass spectrometry identified 119, 159 and 142 proteins in MVs from three different strains of Piscirickettsia salmonis isolated from salmonids in Chile (LF-89), Norway (NVI 5692) and Canada (NVI 5892), respectively. MV comparison revealed several strain-specific differences related to higher virulence capability for LF-89 MVs, both in vivo and in vitro, and stronger similarities between the NVI 5692 and NVI 5892 MV proteome. The MVs were similar in size and appearance as analyzed by electron microscopy and dynamic light scattering. The MVs from all three strains were internalized by both commercial and primary immune cell cultures, which suggest a potential role of the MVs in the bacterium's utilization of leukocytes. When MVs were injected into an adult zebrafish infection model, an upregulation of several pro-inflammatory genes were observed in spleen and kidney, indicating a modulating effect on the immune system. The present study is the first comparative analysis of P. salmonis derived MVs, highlighting strain-specific vesicle characteristics. The results further illustrate that the MV proteome from one bacterial strain is not representative of all bacterial strains within one species.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27764198 PMCID: PMC5072724 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0165099
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Identification and isolation of membrane vesicles isolated from Piscirickettsia salmonis.
(A) Bacterial cultures of P. salmonis NVI 5692 grown in EBFC is viewed by scanning election microscopy. Arrows indicate MVs secreted from the bacterial cells. (B) Growth curves of P. salmonis in EBFC medium, square show time point for isolation of MV (n = 3).
Fig 2Size distribution and imaging analysis of Piscirickettsia salmonis membrane vesicles.
Vesicle size and range analyzed by dynamic light scattering (left panels) (n = 3) and electron transmission microscopy imaging (right panels) of MVs isolated from LF-89, NVI 5692 and NVI 5892. Bar size, 200 nm.
Fig 3Proteomic characterizations of Piscirickettsia salmonis membrane vesicles.
The identified proteins in the MVs were grouped into families according to their (A) predicted subcellular localization and (C) putative function. (B) Venn diagram comparing MV proteins from three different strains of P. salmonis.
Top 20 proteins most commonly identified by label-free shotgun proteomics in Piscirickettsia salmonis membrane vesicles.
| LF-89 | NVI 5692 | NVI 592 | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Identified protein | Total number of spectra | Identified protein | Total number of spectra | Identified protein | Total number of spectra |
| Outer membrane family protein | 81 | Putative uncharacterized protein | 144 | Putative uncharacterized protein | 171 |
| DNA-directed RNA polymerase subunit beta | 79 | Putative uncharacterized protein | 136 | Peptidyl-prolyl cis-trans isomerase | 140 |
| Bacterial DNA-binding family protein | 72 | Prolyl oligopeptidase family protein | 133 | Outer membrane beta-barrel domain protein | 104 |
| Chaperone protein DnaK | 63 | Type I secretion outer membrane TolC family protein | 89 | Outer membrane protein assembly factor BamA | 89 |
| 60kDa chaperonin GroEL | 58 | SH3 domain of the SH3b1 type family protein | 86 | Prolyl oligopeptidase family protein | 83 |
| 30s ribosomal protein S1 | 44 | Conjugal transfer/type IV secretion DotA/TraY family protein | 81 | Type I secretion outer membrane, TolC family protein | 82 |
| SH3 domain of the SH3b1 type family protein | 44 | Outer membrane beta-barrel domain protein | 81 | Outer membrane family protein | 79 |
| ATP synthase subunit beta | 40 | Outer membrane protein assembly factor BamA | 72 | Chaperone protein DnaK | 74 |
| Succinyl-CoA synthetase subunit beta | 37 | 30s ribosomal protein S1 | 69 | SH3 domain of the SH3b1 type family protein | 72 |
| Adenylosuccinate synthetase | 35 | Peptidyl-prolyl cis-trans isomerase | 65 | Conjugal transfer family protein | 71 |
| 50S ribosomal protein L2 | 35 | Bacterial DNA-binding family protein | 65 | OmpA family protein | 68 |
| Pyruvate dehydrogenase E1 component | 35 | 50S ribosomal protein L2 | 64 | Outer membrane protein assembly factor BamD | 64 |
| Translation elongation factor Tu | 32 | Outer membrane protein assembly factor BamD | 63 | Bacterial DNA-binding family protein | 62 |
| ATP synthase subunit alpha | 31 | Chaperone protein HtpG | 60 | Conjugal transfer/type IV secretion DotA/TraY family protein | 61 |
| 30S ribosomal protein S10 | 31 | Conjugal transfer family protein | 60 | Glycerophosphoryl diester phosphodiesterase family protein | 57 |
| Acetyl-CoA carboxylase, biotin carboxylase subunit | 30 | NAD-specific glutamate dehydrogenase | 59 | 50S ribosomal protein L2 | 57 |
| GTP-binding protein TypA/BipA | 30 | ATP synthase subunit alpha | 57 | 30s ribosomal protein S1 | 55 |
| Adenylosuccinate lyase | 30 | Chaperone protein DnaK | 57 | Putative uncharacterized protein | 52 |
| Putative uncharacterized protein | 29 | Glycerophosphoryl diester phosphodiesterase family protein | 56 | ostA-like family protein | 48 |
| Glutamine synthetase | 28 | Succinyl-CoA synthetase subunit beta | 50 | DSBA-like thioredoxin domain protein | 46 |
*Proteins identified in MVs from all three strains of P. salmonis
**Proteins identified in MVs from P. salmonis strains NVI 5692 and NVI 5892
Fig 4Internalization and effect of membrane vesicles isolated from Piscirickettsia salmonis in fish cells.
(A) Cytopathic effect of 20 μg/mL MVs in SHK-1 cells. The cytopathic effect is characterized by the production of rounded vacuoles (arrow). Bar size, 100 μm. (B) The effect of three different MV concentrations (10, 20 and 40 μg/mL) on internalization in SHK-1 cells and kidney and spleen primary leukocytes isolated from adult zebrafish assessed by flow cytometry (n = 3). Results are presented as mean ± SD. Asterisks indicate statistical significances between the different concentrations of MVs within each cell type (Two-way ANOVA, Tukey`s multiple comparison test). P value: **** < 0.0001; *** < 0.001; ** < 0.01; * < 0.1.
Fig 5Adult zebrafish challenged with membrane vesicles isolated from Piscirickettsia salmonis.
Cumulative survival of adult zebrafish injected with 40 μg of MVs isolated from the three different strains of P. salmonis (LF-89, NVI 5692 and NVI 5892) or PBS (n = 20).
Fig 6Immune gene transcription of adult zebrafish challenged with P. salmonis and isolated membrane vesicles analyzed by RT-qPCR.
Immune gene expression of kidney and spleen, isolated 14 days post injection with either 40 μg MVs isolated from three different strains of P. salmonis or 1x107 CFU of the same bacteria strains (LF-89, NVI 5692 and NVI 5892). Results are presented as mean +/- SD. Asterisk indicate significantly upregulated genes compared to the PBS control p<0.05, two tailed unpaired Student’s t-test (n = 3).