| Literature DB >> 35878218 |
Yizhuo Zhang1, Xuelian Li1, Hongwei Tian1, Baoju An1, Bing Yan1, Jun Cai1,2,3.
Abstract
Vegetative insecticidal protein Vip3Aa, secreted by many Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) strains during the vegetative growth stage, represents the second-generation insecticidal toxin. In recent years, significant progress has been made on its structure and action mechanism. However, how it is translocated across the cytoplasmic membrane into the environment remains a mystery. This work demonstrates that Vip3Aa is not secreted by the General Secretion (Sec) System. To reveal the secretory pathway of Vip3A, we purified the membrane vesicles (MVs) of B. thuringiensis BMB171 and observed by TEM. The size of MVs was determined by the dynamic light scattering method, and their diameter was approximately 40-200 nm, which is consistent with the vesicles in Gram-negative bacteria. Moreover, Vip3A could be detected in the purified MVs by Western blot, and immunoelectron microscopy reveals Vip3A antibody-coated gold particles located in the MVs. After deleting its signal peptide, chitinase B (ChiB) failed to be secreted. However, the recombinant ChiB, whose signal peptide was substituted with the N-terminal 39 amino acids from Vip3A, was secreted successfully through MVs. Thus, this sequence is proposed as the signal region responsible for vesicle transport. Together, our results revealed for the first time that Vip3Aa is transported to the medium via MVs.Entities:
Keywords: Bacillus thuringiensis; Vip3Aa; membrane vesicles; protein secretion
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35878218 PMCID: PMC9319297 DOI: 10.3390/toxins14070480
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Toxins (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6651 Impact factor: 5.075
Figure 1Vip3Aa protein is not secreted via the sec secretion pathway. (a) Western blot analysis of Vip3Aa and ChiB signal peptide-guided Vip3Aa in the pellet (upper panel) and the supernatant (lower panel) of BMB171. (b) Illustration of how SecYEG-fused protein gene integrated onto the genome of BMB171strain to generate a knock-in strain BMB171-Sec. (c) Relative expression levels of SecYEG genes in the BMB171 and BMB171-Sec were determined by qRT-PCR analysis. (d,e) Western blot analysis of Maltose Binding Protein (MBP) (d) and Vip3Aa (e) in BMB171 and BMB171-Sec expressed in the pellet (upper panel) and the supernatant (lower panel).
Figure 2Gram-positive bacteria B. thuringiensis BMB171 can produce MVs. (a) Negative-staining TEM of purified MVs (scale bars, 50 nm). (b) Size distribution of MVs measured with dynamic light scattering (DLS) shows the diameter range of 40–200 nm.
Figure 3Vip3Aa was detected in membrane vesicles. (a) MVs collected from the culture media of BMB171/Vip3Aa and BMB171/ChiBsp-Vip3Aa were analyzed by Western Blot. Samples were detected by anti-Vip3Aa antibody. (b) Immunoelectron microscopy revealed Vip3Aa in isolated vesicles. Solid arrows, gold particles (6 nm) depicting Vip3Aa binding (scale bars, 50 nm). After permeabilization, some membrane vesicles structure are disrupted and other morphologies appear.
Figure 4Critical regions of Vip3Aa that affect its secretion. (a) Western blot analysis of Vip3Aa and Δ11Vip3Aa expressed in the pellet (upper panel) and the supernatant (lower panel). (b) The organization of Vip3Aa DomainI. (c) Western blot analysis of Δα1-Vip3Aa, Δα2-Vip3Aa, Δα3-Vip3Aa, Δα4-Vip3Aa, and Vip3Aa expressed in different α-helix-deficient strains was visualized in the pellet (upper panel) and the supernatant (lower panel). Samples were collected at 12 h (left) and 24 h (right).
Figure 5Identification of the signal regions for MV secretion. (a) Replacing the chiB signal peptide sequence with Vip3A possible signal regions. (b) Western blot analysis of ChiB, ΔspChiB, N1-ΔspChiB, N2-ΔspChiB and N3-ΔspChiB expressed in BMB171. Samples were collected at 12 h. (c) Concentrated supernatant (upper panel) and MVs (lower panel) purified from the culture media of BMB171/ChiB and BMB171/N2-ΔspChiB were analyzed by Western blotting. (d) Western blot analysis of ChiB expressed in BMB171/ChiB, BMB171/N2-ΔspChiB and BMB171/α1 + ChiB. Samples were collected at 12 h.
Bacterial strains and plasmids used in this study.
| Strains and Plasmids | Relevant Properties | Source of Reference |
|---|---|---|
|
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| DH5α | F- φ80 | Stored in lab |
|
| ||
| BMB171 | An acrystalliferous mutant strain; high transformation frequency | [ |
| BMB171-Sec | This study | |
| BMB171/pHT- | BMB171 harboring pHT- | This study |
| BMB171/pPCsp | BMB171 harboring pPCsp | This study |
| BMB171-Sec/pHT- | BMB171-Sec harboringpHT- | This study |
| BMB171/pHT- | BMB171 harboring pHT- | This study |
| BMB171-Sec/pHT- | BMB171-Sec harboring pHT- | This study |
| BMB171/pPΔα1 | BMB171 harboring pPΔα1 | This study |
| BMB171/pPΔα2 | BMB171 harboring pPΔα2 | This study |
| BMB171/pPΔα3 | BMB171 harboring pPΔα3 | This study |
| BMB171/pPΔα4 | BMB171 harboring pPΔα4 | This study |
| BMB171/pHT- | BMB171 harboringpHT- | This study |
| BMB171/pHT-Δsp | BMB171 harboring pHT-Δsp | This study |
| BMB171/pPN1Δsp | BMB171 harboring pPN1Δsp | This study |
| BMB171/pPN2Δsp | BMB171 harboring pPN2Δsp | This study |
| BMB171/pPN3Δsp | BMB171 harboring pPN3Δsp | This study |
| BMB171/pPα1VΔsp | BMB171 harboring pPα1VΔsp | This study |
|
| ||
| pHT1k | [ | |
| pHT- | pHT1K + Promotor- | This study |
| pPCsp | pHT1K + Promotor- | This study |
| pHT- | pHT1K + Promotor- | This study |
| pPΔα1 | pHT1K + Promotor- | This study |
| pPΔα2 | pHT1K + Promotor- | This study |
| pPΔα3 | pHT1K + Promotor- | This study |
| pPΔα4 | pHT1K + Promotor- | This study |
| pHT- | pHT1K + Promotor- | This study |
| pHT-Δsp | pHT1K + Promotor- | This study |
| pPN1Δsp | pHT1K + Promotor- | This study |
| pPN2Δsp | pHT1K + Promotor- | This study |
| pPN3Δsp | pHT1K + Promotor- | This study |
| pPα1VΔsp | pHT1K + Promotor | This study |
| pRB1028 | Stored in lab | |
| pRB- | pRB1028-secYEG(U + | This study |
AmpR, ampicillin resistance; EmrR, erythromycin resistance; SpcR, spectinomycin resistance.