Affiliation:
1. Laboratory of Bacterial Pathogenesis and Immunology, The Rockefeller University, New York, New York 10021
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Neisseria gonorrhoeae
is naturally able to take up exogenous DNA and undergo genetic transformation. This ability correlates with the presence of functional type IV pili, and uptake of DNA is dependent on the presence of a specific 10-bp sequence. Among the known competence factors in
N. gonorrhoeae
, none has been shown to interact with the incoming DNA. Here we describe ComE, a DNA-binding protein involved in neisserial competence. The gene
comE
was identified through similarity searches in the gonococcal genome sequence, using as the query ComEA, the DNA receptor in competent
Bacillus subtilis
. The gene
comE
is present in four identical copies in the genomes of both
N. gonorrhoeae
and
Neisseria meningitidis
, located downstream of each of the rRNA operons. Single-copy deletion of
comE
in
N. gonorrhoeae
did not have a measurable effect on competence, whereas serial deletions led to gradual decrease in transformation frequencies, reaching a 4 × 10
4
-fold reduction when all copies were deleted. Transformation deficiency correlated with impaired ability to take up exogenous DNA; however, the mutants presented normal piliation and twitching motility phenotype. The product of
comE
has 99 amino acids, with a predicted signal peptide; by immunodetection, a 8-kDa protein corresponding to processed ComE was observed in different strains of
N. gonorrhoeae
and
N. meningitidis
. Recombinant His-tagged ComE showed DNA binding activity, without any detectable sequence specificity. Thus, we identified a novel gonococcal DNA-binding competence factor which is necessary for DNA uptake and does not affect pilus biogenesis or function.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
73 articles.
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