Affiliation:
1. Division of Infectious Diseases, Department of Medicine, School of Medicine, University of California, Los Angeles, California 90095-1688
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Glutamine synthetase (GS) and superoxide dismutase (SOD), large multimeric enzymes that are thought to play important roles in the pathogenicity of
Mycobacterium tuberculosis
, are among the bacterium's major culture filtrate proteins in actively growing cultures. Although these proteins lack a leader peptide, their presence in the extracellular medium during early stages of growth suggested that they might be actively secreted. To understand their mechanism of export, we cloned the homologous genes (
glnA1
and
sodA
) from the rapid-growing, nonpathogenic
Mycobacterium smegmatis
, generated
glnA1
and
sodA
mutants of
M. smegmatis
by allelic exchange, and quantitated expression and export of both mycobacterial and nonmycobacterial GSs and SODs in these mutants. We also quantitated expression and export of homologous and heterologous SODs from
M. tuberculosis
. When each of the genes was expressed from a multicopy plasmid,
M. smegmatis
exported comparable proportions of both the
M. tuberculosis
and
M. smegmatis
GSs (in the
glnA1
strain) or SODs (in the
sodA
strain), in contrast to previous observations in wild-type strains. Surprisingly, recombinant
M. smegmatis
and
M. tuberculosis
strains even exported nonmycobacterial SODs. To determine the extent to which export of these large, leaderless proteins is expression dependent, we constructed a recombinant
M. tuberculosis
strain expressing green fluorescent protein (GFP) at high levels and a recombinant
M. smegmatis
strain coexpressing the
M. smegmatis
GS,
M. smegmatis
SOD, and
M. tuberculosis
BfrB (bacterioferritin) at high levels. The recombinant
M. tuberculosis
strain exported GFP even in early stages of growth and at proportions very similar to those of the endogenous
M. tuberculosis
GS and SOD. Similarly, the recombinant
M. smegmatis
strain exported bacterioferritin, a large (∼500-kDa), leaderless, multimeric protein, in proportions comparable to GS and SOD. In contrast, high-level expression of the large, leaderless, multimeric protein malate dehydrogenase did not lead to extracellular accumulation because the protein was highly unstable extracellularly. These findings indicate that, contrary to expectations, export of
M. tuberculosis
GS and SOD in actively growing cultures is not due to a protein-specific export mechanism, but rather to bacterial leakage or autolysis, and that the extracellular abundance of these enzymes is simply due to their high level of expression and extracellular stability. The same determinants likely explain the presence of other leaderless proteins in the extracellular medium of actively growing
M. tuberculosis
cultures.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology
Cited by
92 articles.
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