Affiliation:
1. Division of Molecular Biology and Biochemistry, School of Biological Sciences, University of Missouri—Kansas City, Kansas City, Missouri 64110
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The human pathogen
Eikenella corrodens
expresses type IV pili and exhibits a phase variation involving the irreversible transition from piliated to nonpiliated variants. On solid medium, piliated variants form small (S-phase), corroding colonies whereas nonpiliated variants form large (L-phase), noncorroding colonies. We are studying pilus structure and function in the clinical isolate
E. corrodens
VA1. Earlier work defined the
pilA
locus which includes
pilA1
,
pilA2
,
pilB
, and
hagA
. Both
pilA1
and
pilA2
predict a type IV pilin, whereas
pilB
predicts a putative pilus assembly protein. The role of
hagA
has not been clearly established. That work also confirmed that
pilA1
encodes the major pilus protein in this strain and showed that the phase variation involves a posttranslational event in pilus formation. In this study, the function of the individual genes comprising the
pilA
locus was examined using a recently developed protocol for targeted interposon mutagenesis of S-phase variant VA1-S1. Different
pilA
mutants were compared to S-phase and L-phase variants for several distinct aspects of phase variation and type IV pilus biosynthesis and function. S-phase cells were characterized by surface pili, competence for natural transformation, and twitching motility, whereas L-phase cells lacked these features. Inactivation of
pilA1
yielded a mutant that was phenotypically indistinguishable from L-phase variants, showing that native biosynthesis of the type IV pilus in strain VA1 is dependent on expression of
pilA1
and proper export and assembly of PilA1. Inactivation of
pilA2
yielded a mutant that was phenotypically indistinguishable from S-phase variants, indicating that
pilA2
is not essential for biosynthesis of functionally normal pili. A mutant inactivated for
pilB
was deficient for twitching motility, suggesting a role for PilB in this pilus-related phenomenon. Inactivation of
hagA
, which may encode a tellurite resistance protein, had no effect on pilus structure or function.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
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