Affiliation:
1. Department of Microbiology and Immunology, University of Maryland School of Medicine, 660 West Redwood Street, Baltimore, Maryland 21201
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Lipoprotein processing by the type II signal peptidase (SPase II) is known to be critical for intracellular growth and virulence for many bacteria, but its role in rickettsiae is unknown. Here, we describe the analysis of
lspA
, encoding a putative SPase II, an essential component of lipoprotein processing in gram-negative bacteria, from
Rickettsia typhi
. Alignment of deduced amino acid sequences shows the presence of highly conserved residues and domains that are essential for SPase II activity in lipoprotein processing. The transcription of
lspA
,
lgt
(encoding prolipoprotein transferase), and
lepB
(encoding type I signal peptidase), monitored by real-time quantitative reverse transcription-PCR, reveals a differential expression pattern during various stages of rickettsial intracellular growth. The higher transcriptional level of all three genes at the preinfection time point indicates that only live and metabolically active rickettsiae are capable of infection and inducing host cell phagocytosis.
lspA
and
lgt
, which are involved in lipoprotein processing, show similar levels of expression. However,
lepB
, which is involved in nonlipoprotein secretion, shows a higher level of expression, suggesting that LepB is the major signal peptidase for protein secretion and supporting our in silico prediction that out of 89 secretory proteins, only 14 are lipoproteins. Overexpression of
R. typhi lspA
in
Escherichia coli
confers increased globomycin resistance, indicating its function as SPase II. In genetic complementation, recombinant
lspA
from
R. typhi
significantly restores the growth of temperature-sensitive
E. coli
Y815 at the nonpermissive temperature, supporting its biological activity as SPase II in prolipoprotein processing.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
17 articles.
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