Affiliation:
1. Department of Molecular and Cell Biology, University of California Berkeley, Berkeley, California, USA
2. School of Public Health, University of California Berkeley, Berkeley, California, USA
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The bulk of bacterial protein secretion occurs through the conserved SecY translocation channel that is powered by SecA-dependent ATP hydrolysis. Many Gram-positive bacteria, including the human pathogen
Listeria monocytogenes
, possess an additional nonessential specialized ATPase, SecA2. SecA2-dependent secretion is required for normal cell morphology and virulence in
L. monocytogenes
; however, the mechanism of export via this pathway is poorly understood.
L. monocytogenes
secA2
mutants form rough colonies, have septation defects, are impaired for swarming motility, and form small plaques in tissue culture cells. In this study, 70 spontaneous mutants were isolated that restored swarming motility to
L. monocytogenes
secA2
mutants. Most of the mutants had smooth colony morphology and septated normally, but all were lysozyme sensitive. Five representative mutants were subjected to whole-genome sequencing. Four of the five had mutations in proteins encoded by the
lmo2769
operon that conferred lysozyme sensitivity and increased swarming but did not rescue virulence defects. A point mutation in
secY
was identified that conferred smooth colony morphology to
secA2
mutants, restored wild-type plaque formation, and increased virulence in mice. This
secY
mutation resembled a
prl
suppressor known to expand the repertoire of proteins secreted through the SecY translocation complex. Accordingly, the Δ
secA2prlA1
mutant showed wild-type secretion levels of P60, an established SecA2-dependent secreted autolysin. Although the
prl
mutation largely suppressed almost all of the measurable SecA2-dependent traits, the Δ
secA2prlA1
mutant was still less virulent
in vivo
than the wild-type strain, suggesting that SecA2 function was still required for pathogenesis.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology