Affiliation:
1. Department of Microbiology, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia, USA
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The twin-arginine translocation (Tat) system, needed to transport folded proteins across biological membranes, has not been characterized in the gastric pathogen
Helicobacter pylori
. Analysis of all
H. pylori
genome sequences available thus far reveals the presence of single copies of
tatA
,
tatB
, and
tatC
needed for the synthesis of a fully functional Tat system. Based on the presence of the twin-arginine hallmark in their signal sequence, only four
H. pylori
proteins appear to be Tat dependent: hydrogenase (HydA), catalase-associated protein (KapA), biotin sulfoxide reductase (BisC), and the ubiquinol cytochrome oxidoreductase Rieske protein (FbcF). In the present study, targeted mutations were aimed at
tatA
,
tatB
,
tatC
, or
queA
(downstream gene control). While double homologous recombination mutations in
tatB
and
queA
were easily obtained, attempts at disrupting
tatA
proved unsuccessful, while deletion of
tatC
led to partial mutants following single homologous recombination, with cells retaining a chromosomal copy of
tatC
. Double homologous recombination
tatC
mutants were obtained only when a plasmid-borne, isopropyl-β-
d
-thiogalactopyranoside (IPTG)-inducible copy of
tatC
was introduced prior to transformation. These conditional
tatC
mutants could grow only in the presence of IPTG, suggesting that
tatC
is essential in
H. pylori
.
tatB
and
tatC
mutants had lower hydrogenase and catalase activities than the wild-type strain did, and the ability of
tatC
mutants to colonize mouse stomachs was severely affected compared to the wild type. Chromosomal complementation of
tatC
mutants restored hydrogenase and catalase activities to wild-type levels, and additional expression of
tatC
in wild-type cells resulted in elevated Tat-dependent enzyme activities. Unexpectedly, the
tat
strains had cell envelope defects.
IMPORTANCE
This work reports the first characterization of the twin-arginine translocation (Tat) system in the gastric pathogen
Helicobacter pylori
. While
tatB
mutants were easily obtained, only single-crossover partial
tatC
mutants or conditional
tatC
mutants could be generated, indicating that
tatC
is essential in
H. pylori
, a surprising finding given the fact that only four proteins are predicted to be translocated by the Tat system in this bacterium. The levels of activity of hydrogenase and catalase, two of the predicted Tat-dependent enzymes, were affected in these mutants. In addition, all
tat
mutants displayed cell envelope defects, and
tatC
mutants were deficient in mouse colonization.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Cited by
20 articles.
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