Affiliation:
1. Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology, University of Guelph, Guelph, Ontario N1G 2W1, Canada
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The O antigen of
Pseudomonas aeruginosa
B-band lipopolysaccharide is synthesized by assembling O-antigen-repeat units at the cytoplasmic face of the inner membrane by nonprocessive glycosyltransferases, followed by polymerization on the periplasmic face. The completed chains are covalently attached to lipid A core by the O-antigen ligase, WaaL. In
P. aeruginosa
the process of ligating these O-antigen molecules to lipid A core is not clearly defined, and an O-antigen ligase has not been identified until this study. Using the sequence of
waaL
from
Salmonella enterica
as a template in a BLAST search, a putative
waaL
gene was identified in the
P. aeruginosa
genome. The candidate gene was amplified and cloned, and a chromosomal knockout of PAO1
waaL
was generated. Lipopolysaccharide (LPS) from this mutant is devoid of B-band O-polysaccharides and semirough (SR-LPS, or core-plus-one O-antigen). The mutant PAO1
waaL
is also deficient in the production of A-band polysaccharide, a homopolymer of
d
-rhamnose. Complementation of the mutant with pPAJL4 containing
waaL
restored the production of both A-band and B-band O antigens as well as SR-LPS, indicating that the knockout was nonpolar and
waaL
is required for the attachment of O-antigen repeat units to the core. Mutation of
waaL
in PAO1 and PA14, respectively, could be complemented with
waaL
from either strain to restore wild-type LPS production. The
waaL
mutation also drastically affected the swimming and twitching motilities of the bacteria. These results demonstrate that
waaL
in
P. aeruginosa
encodes a functional O-antigen ligase that is important for cell wall integrity and motility of the bacteria.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
129 articles.
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