Affiliation:
1. Instituto de Investigaciones Biotecnológicas-Instituto Tecnológico de Chascomús (IIB-INTECH), Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas, Universidad Nacional de General San Martín (CONICET-UNSAM), 1650 San Martín, Buenos Aires, Argentina
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Brucella
periplasmic cyclic β-1,2-glucan plays an important role during bacterium-host interaction. Nuclear magnetic resonance spectrometry analysis, thin-layer chromatography, and DEAE-Sephadex chromatography were used to characterize
Brucella abortus
cyclic glucan. In the present study, we report that a fraction of
B. abortus
cyclic β-1,2-glucan is substituted with succinyl residues, which confer anionic character on the cyclic β-1,2-glucan. The oligosaccharide backbone is substituted at C-6 positions with an average of two succinyl residues per glucan molecule. This O-ester-linked succinyl residue is the only substituent of
Brucella
cyclic glucan. A
B. abortus
open reading frame (BAB1_1718) homologous to
Rhodobacter sphaeroides
glucan succinyltransferase (OpgC) was identified as the gene encoding the enzyme responsible for cyclic glucan modification. This gene was named
cgm
for
c
yclic
g
lucan
m
odifier and is highly conserved in
Brucella melitensis
and
Brucella suis
. Nucleotide sequencing revealed that
B. abortus cgm
consists of a 1,182-bp open reading frame coding for a predicted membrane protein of 393 amino acid residues (42.7 kDa) 39% identical to
Rhodobacter sphaeroides
succinyltransferase.
cgm
null mutants in
B. abortus
strains 2308 and S19 produced neutral glucans without succinyl residues, confirming the identity of this protein as the cyclic-glucan succinyltransferase enzyme. In this study, we demonstrate that succinyl substituents of cyclic β-1,2-glucan of
B. abortus
are necessary for hypo-osmotic adaptation. On the other hand, intracellular multiplication and mouse spleen colonization are not affected in
cgm
mutants, indicating that cyclic-β-1,2-glucan succinylation is not required for virulence and suggesting that no low-osmotic stress conditions must be overcome during infection.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
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