Towards the identification of type II secretion signals in a nonacylated variant of pullulanase from Klebsiella oxytoca

被引:45
作者
Francetic, O [1 ]
Pugsley, AP [1 ]
机构
[1] Inst Pasteur, Mol Genet Unit, CNRS, URA2172, F-75724 Paris, France
关键词
D O I
10.1128/JB.187.20.7045-7055.2005
中图分类号
Q93 [微生物学];
学科分类号
071005 ; 100705 ;
摘要
Pullulanase (PuIA) from the gram-negative bacterium Klebsiella oxytoca is a 116-kDa surface-anchored lipoprotein of the isoamylase family that allows growth on branched maltodextrin polymers. PuIA is specifically secreted via a type 11 secretion system. PelBsp-PulA, a nonacylated variant of PulA made by replacing the lipoprotein signal peptide (sp) with the signal peptide of pectate lyase PelB from Erwinia chrysanthemi, was efficiently secreted into the medium. Two 80-amino-acid regions of PuIA, designated A and B, were previously shown to promote secretion of P-lactamase (BlaM) and endoglucanase CeIZ fused to the C terminus. We show that A and B fused to the PelB signal peptide can also promote secretion of BlaM and CeIZ but not that of nuclease NucB or several other reporter proteins. However, the deletion of most of region A or all of region B, either individually or together, had only a minor effect on PelBsp-PulA secretion. Four independent linker insertions between amino acids 234 and 324 in PelBsp-PulA abolished secretion. This part of PuIA, region C, could contain part of the PuIA secretion signal or be important for its correct presentation. Deletion of region C abolished PelBsp-PulA secretion without dramatically affecting its stability. PelBsp-PulA-NucB chimeras were secreted only if the PulA-NucB fusion point was located downstream from region C. The data show that at least three regions of PulA contain information that influences its secretion, depending on their context, and that some reporter proteins might contribute to the secretion of chimeras of which they are a part.
引用
收藏
页码:7045 / 7055
页数:11
相关论文
共 58 条
[1]   The PDZ domain of OutC and the N-terminal region of OutD determine the secretion specificity of the type II out pathway of Erwinia chrysanthemi [J].
Bouley, J ;
Condemine, G ;
Shevchik, VE .
JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR BIOLOGY, 2001, 308 (02) :205-219
[2]   ON LOCALIZATION OF ALKALINE PHOSPHATASE AND CYCLIC PHOSPHODIESTERASE IN ESCHERICHIA COLI [J].
BROCKMAN, RW ;
HEPPEL, LA .
BIOCHEMISTRY, 1968, 7 (07) :2554-+
[3]   A VECTOR FOR THE CONSTRUCTION OF TRANSLATIONAL FUSIONS TO TEM BETA-LACTAMASE AND THE ANALYSIS OF PROTEIN EXPORT SIGNALS AND MEMBRANE-PROTEIN TOPOLOGY [J].
BROOMESMITH, JK ;
SPRATT, BG .
GENE, 1986, 49 (03) :341-349
[4]   A monomeric red fluorescent protein [J].
Campbell, RE ;
Tour, O ;
Palmer, AE ;
Steinbach, PA ;
Baird, GS ;
Zacharias, DA ;
Tsien, RY .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 2002, 99 (12) :7877-7882
[5]   Pachacamac during the Early Intermediate period: Study of a prehispanic monumental site on the central Coast of Peru [J].
Chapdelaine, C .
LATIN AMERICAN ANTIQUITY, 2000, 11 (03) :303-304
[6]   Type II protein secretion in gram-negative pathogenic bacteria:: The study of the structure/secretion relationships of the cellulase CeI5 (formerly EGZ) from Erwinia chrysanthemi [J].
Chapon, V ;
Czjzek, M ;
El Hassouni, M ;
Py, B ;
Juy, M ;
Barras, F .
JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR BIOLOGY, 2001, 310 (05) :1055-1066
[7]   The C-terminal domain of the secretin PulD contains the binding site for its cognate chaperone, PulS, and confers PulS dependence on plV(f1) function [J].
Daefler, S ;
Guilvout, I ;
Hardie, KR ;
Pugsley, AP ;
Russel, M .
MOLECULAR MICROBIOLOGY, 1997, 24 (03) :465-475
[8]  
DENFERT C, 1989, J BIOL CHEM, V264, P17462
[9]   EXPORT AND SECRETION OF THE LIPOPROTEIN PULLULANASE BY KLEBSIELLA-PNEUMONIAE [J].
DENFERT, C ;
CHAPON, C ;
PUGSLEY, AP .
MOLECULAR MICROBIOLOGY, 1987, 1 (01) :107-116
[10]   CLONING AND EXPRESSION IN ESCHERICHIA-COLI OF THE KLEBSIELLA-PNEUMONIAE GENES FOR PRODUCTION, SURFACE LOCALIZATION AND SECRETION OF THE LIPOPROTEIN PULLULANASE [J].
DENFERT, C ;
RYTER, A ;
PUGSLEY, AP .
EMBO JOURNAL, 1987, 6 (11) :3531-3538