Rabu, 14 Desember 2011
Identification of a Vibrio furnissii Oligopeptide Permease and Characterization of Its In Vitro Hemolytic Activityᰔ†
JOURNAL OF BACTERIOLOGY, Nov. 2007, p. 8215–8223
0021-9193/07/$08.00ϩ0 doi:10.1128/JB.01039-07
Copyright © 2007, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Vol. 189, No. 22
Tung-Kung Wu,* Yu-Kuo Wang, Yi-Chin Chen, Jen-Min Feng, Yen-Hsi Liu, and Ting-Yi Wang
Department of Biological Science and Technology, National Chiao Tung University, Hsin-Chu, Taiwan, 300, Republic of China
Received 1 July 2007/Accepted 4 September 2007
We describe purification and characterization of an oligopeptide permease protein (Hly-OppA) from
Vibrio furnissii that has multifaceted functions in solute binding, in in vitro hemolysis, in antibiotic
resistance, and as a virulence factor in bacterial pathogenesis. The solute-binding function was revealed
by N-terminal and internal peptide sequences of the purified protein and was confirmed by discernible
effects on oligopeptide binding, by accumulation of fluorescent substrates, and by fluorescent substrate-
antibiotic competition assay experiments. The purified protein exhibited host-specific in vitro hemolytic
activity against various mammalian erythrocytes and apparent cytotoxicity in CHO-K1 cells. Recombinant
Hly-OppA protein and an anti-Hly-OppA monoclonal antibody exhibited and neutralized the in vitro
hemolytic activity, respectively, which further confirmed the hemolytic activity of the gene product. In
addition, a V. furnissii hly-oppA knockout mutant caused less mortality than the wild-type strain when it
was inoculated into BALB/c mice, indicating the virulence function of this protein. Finally, the in vitro
hemolytic activity was also confirmed with homologous ATP-binding cassette-type transporter proteins
from other Vibrio species.
Members of the genus Vibrio are major causes of human
gastroenteritis resulting from the consumption of contami-
nated marine products. Vibrio furnissii, first described as gas-
producing biovar II of Vibrio fluvialis by Brenner et al. (4), like
Vibrio parahaemolyticus, is thought to cause acute gastroenter-
itis with symptoms including diarrhea, abdominal cramps, nau-
sea, and vomiting (4, 25, 39).
Hemolysin (Hly), in addition to other pathogenic Vibrio fac-
tors, such as proteases, hemagglutinins, and other hydrolytic
exoenzymes, has been suggested to be an important virulence
factor in the pathogenesis of many Vibrio species and is the
most feared virulence factor involved in the gastrointestinal
disorders caused by V. parahaemolyticus (3, 7, 23, 31, 33).
However, little is known about V. furnissii and its possible
production of toxins, which may be important in both patho-
genesis and virulence. Several extracellular hemolysins have
been isolated and characterized from various species of Vibrio,
but not from V. furnissii (2, 5, 15, 19–21, 32, 40). Recently, a
functional role of phosphomannomutase in the virulence of V.
furnissii was reported (22).
Oligopeptide transport (Opp) systems in bacteria belong to
the ATP-binding cassette (ABC) family of transporters. They
are composed of five subunits: an extracellular oligopeptide-
binding protein that specifically binds to incoming substrates
and delivers them to the translocator, two transmembrane
proteins that form the pore, and two ATP-binding proteins
involved in ATP hydrolysis (13, 17, 18). The Opp systems have
diverse functional roles, ranging from uptake of oligopeptides
from growth media to various signaling processes (6, 9, 14, 16,
24, 27, 34, 38). Studies of this protein family have revealed that
the oligopeptide permease A (OppA) of bacteria is one of the
solute-binding proteins (SBPs) that play an important role in
the transport of oligopeptides into the cell and in various
signaling processes (24).
Although both Hly and OppA have been broadly character-
ized, no direct correlations between these two proteins have
been reported. In this study, we report identification of an SBP
(designated Hly-OppA), originally purified from extracellular
media of V. furnissii, that has both a solute-binding function
and an in vitro hemolytic activity, and we demonstrate its
virulent effect in mice.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Bacterial strains and materials. V. furnissii strain ATCC 35016 was obtained
in a freeze-dried form from the Culture Collection and Research Center (Hsin-
Chu, Taiwan). This bacterium showed hemolysis on tryptic soy broth (TSB) agar
plates containing 1.5% NaCl and 5% sheep blood. Phenyl Sepharose 6 Fast Flow,
Mono Q, and Sepharose 4B columns were provided by Amersham Pharmacia
Biotech (Piscataway, NJ). Protein molecular weight standards and a protein
assay kit were obtained from Bio-Rad (Hercules, CA).
Purification of Hly-OppA from V. furnissii culture medium. An Erlenmeyer
flask containing 500 ml TSB was inoculated with V. furnissii and incubated at
37°C in a rotary shaker (180 cycles/min) for 50 h. The culture supernatant was
first centrifuged at 6,483 ϫ g for 30 min at 4°C and then subjected to ammonium
sulfate precipitation at 60% saturation. The precipitated proteins were collected
and resuspended in 10 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.6). After dialysis in this buffer, the
protein solution was loaded onto a Phenyl-Sepharose 6 Fast Flow column pre-
equilibrated with 10 mM Tris-HCl–1 mM EDTA (pH 7.6) and eluted with a
linear 0 to 50% ethylene glycol gradient. Fractions exhibiting hemolysis were
pooled, dialyzed, and concentrated using a YM30 ultrafiltration membrane. The
active sample was applied to a Mono Q column equilibrated with 10 mM
Tris-HCl and then eluted with 4 void volumes of a step gradient consisting of 50,
100, 200, 300, and 500 mM and 1 M KCl. Protein eluted between 100 and 200
mM KCl. The active fractions represented partially purified protein and were
used for preparation of a monoclonal antibody. The monoclonal antibody was
conjugated onto Sepharose 4B and used for protein purification. Next, the
protein-bound monoclonal antibody column was washed with 20 void volumes of
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of Biological
Science and Technology, National Chiao Tung University, Hsin-Chu,
Taiwan, 300, Republic of China. Phone: 886-3-5729287. Fax: 886-3-
5725700. E-mail: tkwmll@mail.nctu.edu.tw.
† Supplemental material for this article may be found at http://jb
.asm.org/.
ᰔ
Published ahead of print on 14 September 2007.
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J. BACTERIOL.
FIG. 1. Purification and characterization of the hemolytic activity of the Hly-OppA protein from V. furnissii. (A) The extracellular medium from
a V. furnissii culture (lane 1) was passed through Phenyl Sepharose 6 Fast Flow, Mono Q, and antibody-conjugated Sepharose 4B columns to obtain
a homogeneous protein (lane 2) with a molecular mass of ϳ58 kDa, as shown by sodium dodecyl sulfate-PAGE. (B) Native PAGE of purified
Hly-OppA, showing a molecular mass of ϳ120 kDa. (C) Hemolytic activity detected when the ammonium sulfate-precipitated protein fraction
(lane 1) and antibody-conjugated purified Hly-OppA (lane 2) from native PAGE were embedded in a blood agar plate. (D) Immunoblot analysis
with antiserum against Hly-OppA, revealing that both the crude (lane 1) and purified (lane 2) proteins yielded a single band. Lane M contained
markers.
10 mM Tris-HCl buffer (pH 7.6) and eluted with 5 void volumes of 10 mM
Tris-HCl (pH 2.8). The protein solution was neutralized with 80 l of 1 M
Tris-HCl (pH 10) and assayed to determine hemolytic activity and protein ho-
mogeneity.
Assay for hemolytic activity. Hemolytic activity was determined using rabbit
erythrocytes that were washed three times with 10 mM phosphate-buffered saline
(PBS) (pH 7.6) and resuspended at a concentration of 4% (vol/vol). For hemo-
lytic activity assays, 0.1 ml of 0.1% Triton X-100, which caused complete release
of hemoglobin from erythrocytes and resulted in the maximum change in absor-
bance at 540 nm, was used as a positive control. The elution buffers, which caused
negligible erythrocyte hemolysis compared with sample fractions, were used as
negative controls. One hundred percent hemolysis was defined as the A540 of
hemoglobin released from erythrocytes treated with 0.1% Triton X-100. One
hemolytic unit was defined as the amount of Hly-OppA that caused release of
50% of the hemoglobin from the rabbit erythrocytes.
Molecular cloning and DNA sequencing. Based on the N-terminal sequence
obtained and the ABC-type oligopeptide transporter conserved gene sequence,
we designed a set of degenerate primers (sense primer YKW-ABC-N1 [5Ј-CA
AGAGTTCGTTCGTGGTAAC-3Ј] and antisense primer YKW-ABC-C1 [5Ј-T
TATTGAGCTTTGATGTAAAG-3Ј]) in order to obtain the core region of the
V. furnissii hly-oppA gene. PCR was carried out under the following conditions:
denaturation at 94°C for 5 min and then 35 cycles of denaturation at 94°C for
15 s, annealing at 58°C for 1 min, and extension at 72°C for 1 min, followed by
a final extension at 72°C for 10 min.
The rapid amplification of cDNA ends method was used for amplification of
both the 5Ј and 3Ј ends (12). The internal sequence primers VF-ABC-R2 (5Ј-C
GTTTCCCAACTTTCAGCAAC-3Ј) and VF-ABC-F2 (5Ј-GCGTGATATGCC
AATCGCACC-3Ј) were used for amplification of the N-terminal and C-terminal
DNA fragments, respectively. To obtain the 5Ј end of the gene, a single antisense
strand was amplified by PCR using genomic DNA and the specific antisense
primer VF-ABC-R2. The resulting DNA was incubated with terminal transferase
and dATP. The sense strand was then generated with a specific poly(dT) primer,
using the antisense strand PCR product as the template. For 3Ј end amplifica-
tion, two anchor primers, VF-ABC-F2 and poly(dT), specific for the central
portion and the 3Ј nontranslated region, respectively, were used for PCR am-
plification of the total DNA, as previously described. The amplified DNA frag-
ment was sequenced using an ABI PRISM 3100 autosequencer according to the
manufacturer’s protocol (Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA).
Analysis of DNA and amino acid sequences. The nucleotide sequence analysis
and protein sequence comparisons were performed with the BLAST and ClustalW
programs, using the BLAST network services at the National Center for Biotech-
nology Information (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov).
Expression and purification of recombinant Hly-OppA protein. The hly-oppA
gene was first subcloned into two expression plasmids, pET3a and pET28a(ϩ),
for Hly-OppA protein expression and antibiotic susceptibility tests. The hly-oppA
PCR fragment was amplified from V. furnissii genomic DNA with oligonucleo-
tide primers YKW-V.fur-ABC-express-N1 (5Ј-GGAATTCCATATGCAGTTG
TTCCAGCTGGCACC-3Ј; NdeI site underlined) and YKW-V.fur-ABC-ex-
press-C1 (5Ј-CCGGAATTCTTATT GCGCTTTGATGTAAAG-3Ј; EcoRI site
underlined) to obtain a 1.56-kbp DNA fragment. This DNA fragment was di-
gested with the NdeI and EcoR I restriction enzymes and ligated into the
pET28a(ϩ) and pET3a(ϩ) vectors, which were predigested with the same re-
striction enzymes, to obtain recombinant expression plasmids pYKW1 and
pYKW3, respectively. pYKW1 and pYKW3 were transformed into Escherichia
coli BL21(DE3)(pLysS) cells to generate E. coli strains YKWEC1 and
YKWEC3, respectively, for protein expression and antibiotic susceptibility tests.
YKWEC1 was grown in 300 ml of LB broth supplemented with 50 g/ml
kanamycin at 37°C to an A600 of 0.6. Expression was induced by addition of
isopropyl--D-thiogalactopyranoside (IPTG) to a final concentration of 1 mM,
and the culture was incubated at 37°C for an additional 5 h before centrifugation.
The cells were harvested and resuspended in 15 ml of 20 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.6)
buffer. The mixture was sonicated, and the cell debris was removed by centrif-
ugation at 12,000 ϫ g for 30 min at 4°C.
Preparation and characterization of monoclonal antibody. A 0.5-ml solution
containing equal parts of Freund’s complete adjuvant and Mono Q chromatog-
raphy-purified Hly-OppA protein (50 g) was injected into female BALB/c mice.
This was followed by three booster injections consisting of 50 g of the protein
emulsified with Freund’s incomplete adjuvant at 10-day intervals; the animals
were bled for hybridization 4 days after the last injection. A myeloma cell line
(FO) was fused with spleen cells from immunized BALB/c mice at a ratio of 1:5.
The culture medium (obtained between days 14 and 21 after fusion) was assayed
for the production of specific antibodies by a solid-phase enzyme-linked immu-
nosorbent assay, using purified protein as the antigen. Each monoclonal antibody
was established by limiting dilutions at least twice. The monoclonal antibody
preparation was used with purified and crude V. furnissii Hly-OppA protein. The
specificity of the antibody was confirmed by Western blotting.
For immunoblot experiments, proteins were electrophoretically separated and
transferred onto polyvinylidene difluoride (PVDF) membranes. The PVDF
membranes were washed with the PBS buffer (pH 7.6) containing 0.05% Tween
20 (PBST) for 10 min, and the immunoblot experiments were carried out by
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FUNCTIONAL CHARACTERIZATION OF V. FURNISSII Hly-OppA
FIG. 2. Dot blots demonstrating binding of the 9-mer oligopeptide
library to purified Hly-OppA protein in a concentration-dependent
manner (lanes 3 to 7). Lanes 1 and 2 contained Hly-OppA protein and
BSA, which were positive (P) and negative (N) controls, respectively.
following the procedure for the ECL Western blotting system, using monoclonal
antibody raised against Hly-OppA (1:500) and anti-mouse immunoglobulin-
horseradish peroxidase (HRP) conjugate (1:5,000). Excess ligand was removed
by washing preparations with PBST for 30 min, and detection of the proteins was
performed according to the manufacturer’s instructions (Amersham Pharmacia
Biotech, Piscataway, NJ). Membranes were exposed to Hyperfilm ECL (Amer-
sham Pharmacia Biotech, Piscataway, NJ) for different times or until a suitable
signal was obtained.
Construction of the V. furnissii hly-oppA knockout mutant and a strain with
hly-oppA restored. An hly-oppA knockout mutant of V. furnissii (VFYKW1) was
constructed by the allelic exchange method (10). A 467-bp fragment, which
included 162 bp of the 5Ј end and 305 bp of the 3Ј end of the hly-oppA gene, was
amplified by PCR with primers YKW-ABC-N1 and YKW-VF-ABC-knockout-
RF1 (antisense primer; 5Ј-AAGTTGGGAAACGGTGGTGACTACAACAA-
3Ј) and primers YKW-VF-ABC-knockout-F1 (sense primer; 5Ј-AAGTTGGGA
AACGGTGGTGACTACAACAA-3Ј) and YKW-ABC-C1. The PCR product
was cloned into an allelic exchange suicide vector, pCVD442, to generate a
recombinant plasmid, pVF-hly-oppA-K, which was transformed into a conjugal
donor, E. coli S17-1 pir (8). The transformed E. coli S17-1 pir strain and V.
furnissii were grown in LB and TSB, respectively, overnight at 37°C before
transconjugation was performed. The pVF-hly-oppA-K vector was then trans-
ferred from E. coli to V. furnissii. The transconjugants were selected on thiosul-
fate citrate bile salts sucrose agar plates containing ampicillin (200 g/ml) and
tested for sensitivity to 10% sucrose. The sucrose-sensitive transconjugants were
8217
grown in LB containing 10% sucrose overnight and spread onto a plate contain-
ing LB with 10% sucrose for selection of sucrose-resistant clones, and they were
further tested for ampicillin sensitivity. The sucrose-resistant, ampicillin-sensitive
strains were then screened by PCR for a 467-bp product that represented the
hly-oppA deletion. The presence or absence of the hly-oppA fragment was vali-
dated both by using a standard biochemical substrate assay kit (Microgen GN-ID
Identification; Microgen Bioproducts Ltd., Camberley, United Kingdom) and by
direct sequencing. Genomic DNA was purified from VFYKW1 and sequenced to
confirm successful construction of the knockout strain. For construction of a
strain with hly-oppA restored (VFYKW2), the hly-oppA gene containing the
signal sequence was amplified by PCR using primers YKW-ABC-SP-N1 (sense
primer; 5Ј-ATGTATAAAAATAAGATCACA-3Ј) and YKW-ABC-C1.
Oligopeptide binding tests. For oligopeptide binding experiments, 4 g/ml
each of the Hly-OppA protein and bovine serum albumin (BSA) and different
concentrations (0.1, 1, 4, 16, and 64 g/ml) of a 9-mer oligopeptide library were
dot blotted onto a PVDF membrane. The unbound area on the membrane was
blocked with 5% nonfat milk and washed three times with PBS containing 0.05%
Tween 20. The membrane was incubated with anti-Hly-OppA antibody (1:500)
and then with anti-mouse immunoglobulin-HRP conjugate (1:5,000). Mem-
branes were exposed to a 3,3-diaminobenzidine tetrahydrochloride (DAB) solu-
tion (10 l of 30% H2O2 and 100 l of DAB [20 mg/ml DAB in dimethyl
sulfoxide] in 10 ml of 50 mM Tris buffer [pH 7.6]) until a suitable signal was
obtained.
Antibiotic susceptibility tests. Individual plates were inoculated with V. furnis-
sii and E. coli containing recombinant hly-oppA expression plasmids. Filter paper
disks that were 6.0 mm in diameter were impregnated with ampicillin (10 g),
carbenicillin (100 g), cephalothin (30 g), chloramphenicol (30 g), colistin
sulfate (10 g), gentamicin (10 g), kanamycin (30 g), nalidixic acid (30 g),
penicillin G (10 U), polymyxin B (300 U), streptomycin (10 g), or tetracycline
(30 g) and were placed on the surface of the plates. The plates were incubated
for 16 h at 37°C under microaerophilic conditions. The resulting inhibition zone
diameters were expressed in millimeters.
Fluorescent substrate binding and antibiotic competition of the V. furnissii
Hly-OppA protein. The solute-binding efficiency of fluorescent substrates was
determined using a Thermo Labsystems fluorometer. The excitation and emis-
sion wavelengths were 544 and 590 nm for ethidium bromide (EtBr) and 485 and
538 nm for SYBR green, respectively. To demonstrate binding of EtBr in intact
bacteria, wild-type V. furnissii, VFYKW1, YKWEC1, and YKWEC2 were grown
FIG. 3. Vector construction for expression and knockout of the hly-oppA gene. (A) The full-length hly-oppA gene was treated with the NdeI
and EcoRI restriction enzymes and inserted into a kanamycin-resistant pET28a(ϩ) vector predigested with the same enzymes to generate pYKW1.
(B) The same hly-oppA open reading frame was inserted into the NdeI/EcoRI sites of ampicillin-resistant pET3a(ϩ) to generate pYKW3. (C) V.
furnissii chromosomal DNA was used as a template for amplification of 162 bp of the 5Ј end and 305 bp of the 3Ј end of the hly-oppA gene. The
467-bp PCR fragment was cloned into an allelic exchange suicide vector, pCVD442, to generate the knockout plasmid pVF-hly-oppA-K. The
pVF-hly-oppA-K plasmid was transferred from E. coli to V. furnissii to generate the V. furnissii hly-oppA knockout strain VFYKW1. The full-length
hly-oppA gene was cloned into pCVD442 to generate pVF-hly-oppA-I and transferred to VFYKW1 to generate the V. furnissii VFYKW2 strain
with hly-oppA restored.
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J. BACTERIOL.
FIG. 4. Solute-binding activity and competitive inhibition tests using the fluorescent substrates EtBr (10 M) and SYBR green (100 U) and
various concentrations of ampicillin. The excitation (Ex) and emission (Em) wavelengths were 544 and 590 nm for EtBr and 485 and 538 nm for
SYBR green, respectively. (A) Transport of EtBr in wild-type V. furnissii (F) or VFYKW1 (E). (B) Transport of EtBr in YKWEC1 or YKWEC2.
XI, EtBr alone; ‚, pET28a(ϩ) alone; छ, pYKW1 alone; E, pET28a(ϩ) plus EtBr; F, pYKW1 plus EtBr. (C) Transport of SYBR green in wild-type
V. furnissii (F) or VFYKW1 (E). (D) Transport of SYBR green in YKWEC1 or YKWEC2. E, pET28a(ϩ) plus SYBR green; F, pYKW1 plus
SYBR green. (E) Ampicillin competitively inhibited transport of EtBr in YKWEC1 in a concentration-dependent manner. Œ, pYKW1 plus EtBr;
F, pYKW1 plus EtBr plus 0.5 mg/ml ampicillin; E, pYKW1 plus EtBr plus 2 mg/ml ampicillin. (F) SYBR green competitively inhibited transport
of EtBr in YKWEC1 in a concentration-dependent manner. Œ, pYKW1 plus EtBr; F, pYKW1 plus EtBr plus 5 U SYBR green; E, pYKW1 plus
EtBr plus 50 U SYBR green.
overnight in LB (supplemented with 25 g/ml kanamycin for strains YKWEC1
and YKWEC2) and were diluted into fresh LB. When the cultures reached an
A600 of 1 at 37°C, the bacteria were centrifuged at 825 ϫ g for 2 min and
resuspended in buffer (50 mM potassium phosphate [pH 7.2], 25 mM glucose, 5
mM MgSO4). The process was repeated twice, and the resulting pellets were
resuspended in 1 ml buffer. For the solute-binding activity assay, either EtBr (10
M) or SYBR green (100 U) was added to a fluorometry plate containing 200 l
of cells. The resulting solution was monitored at 25°C for fluorescence excitation
and emission for 20 min at 20-s intervals. When the antibiotic competition assay
was performed, different concentrations (500 g/ml and 2 mg/ml) of ampicillin
and 10 M EtBr were mixed and then added to a fluorometry plate containing
200 l of cells. For SYBR green competition assays of EtBr influx, different
concentrations (5 and 50 U) of SYBR green were added, and the binding
efficiency of EtBr was recorded as previously described.
Biofilm assay. The biofilm formation assay used was based on a modified
method (37). Cells from overnight colonies were grown on tryptic soy agar (TSA)
plates and in 3 ml TSB at 37°C overnight. Cells from the plates were freshly
inoculated into 3 ml TSB and grown to an A600 of 0.5. Three microliters of each
cell suspension was added to 1 ml TSB in borosilicate glass tubes. The cultures
were then incubated at 37°C without shaking for the time required. The tubes
were rinsed with distilled water to remove nonadherent cells. Biofilms were
stained by addition of 1.2 ml of 1% crystal violet for 25 min, followed by a
distilled water rinse. The cell-associated dye was solubilized in 1.2 ml dimethyl
sulfoxide and quantified by measuring the A570 of the resulting solution. Each
assay was performed at least in triplicate.
Thermostability of the purified protein. The effect of temperature on the
hemolytic activity of purified Hly-OppA was determined by incubating 2 hemo-
lytic units of the purified protein in PBS for 30 min at different temperatures (16,
25, 30, 37, 40, 42, 45, 50, 52, 55, 57, 60, 65, 70, and 75°C) and then assaying the
residual hemolytic activity with 4% rabbit erythrocytes, as previously described.
Detection of cytotoxic effects on CHO-K1 cells. The purified Hly-OppA was
assayed to determine its activity against CHO-K1 cells. Cells were grown in an
F-12 medium supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum and were maintained
in a humidified atmosphere consisting of 5% CO2 in air at 37°C. Single-cell
suspensions were obtained from ϳ90% confluent cultures by harvesting cells
with trypsin-EDTA and then seeded into six-well plates. For morphological
studies, 1 g/ml of Hly-OppA was added to a cell culture, and the plates were
incubated for 30 min at 37°C. Cells were stained with 50% trypan blue exclusion
stain and then visualized by microscopy. In parallel, cells treated with BSA and
PBS were used as negative controls.
VOL. 189, 2007
FUNCTIONAL CHARACTERIZATION OF V. FURNISSII Hly-OppA
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FIG. 5. Effect of the Hly-OppA protein on the V. furnissii hemolytic phenotype, erythrocyte lysis, morphology, and cytotoxicity in CHO-K1 cells.
(A) Hemolytic phenotype of wild-type V. furnissii, VFYKW1, and VFYKW2 on TSA containing 5% sheep blood. (B) Erythrocyte lysis and
hemoglobin release caused by purified Hly-OppA protein in the presence or absence of anti-Hly-OppA monoclonal antibody, as measured by the
change in absorbance at 540 nm. Blank, PBS buffer; Negative control, BSA (0.5 g/l); Hly-OppA, 0.1 g/l Hly-OppA; Hly-OppA ϩ anti
Hly-OppA mAb, 0.1 g/l Hly-OppA plus 0.1 g/l anti-Hly-OppA monoclonal antibody; Hly-OppA ϩ mouse serum, 0.1 g/l Hly-OppA plus
0.1 g/l mouse serum; Positive control, 0.1% Triton X-100. (C and D) CHO-K1 cells were not exposed (C) or exposed (D) to the Hly-OppA protein
(1 g/ml) for 30 min at 37°C. (E) Dose-dependent cytotoxicity of the Hly-OppA protein in CHO-K1 cells. CHO-K1 cells were exposed to various
concentrations of the Hly-OppA protein for 30 min, and the viability of the cells was determined using a commercial cytotoxicity assay kit. The
data are the means and standard deviations from at least three independent experiments.
Cell viability was assessed with a cell counting kit, and the assays were per-
formed in F-12 medium supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum. The
CHO-K1 cells were treated with serial dilutions of Hly-OppA (0, 0.125, 0.25, 0.5,
1, and 2 g/ml) and maintained in a humidified atmosphere consisting of 5%
CO2 in air at 37°C for 24 h. After trypsinization and trypan blue exclusion of the
cells, the cells were counted and the results were compared with the numbers of
cells in the untreated cultures. The viability data were expressed as means and
standard deviations from the three independent experiments.
Scanning electron microscopic analysis of cell morphology. The V. furnissii
wild-type strain and the hly-oppA knockout mutant were incubated in broth
medium for the time required. Cell morphology was determined by scanning
electron microscopy. Briefly, cell-containing coverslips were fixed in a 2.5%
glutaraldehyde solution for 1 h at room temperature. The coverslips were then
treated with a 1% osmium tetroxide solution for 30 min, dehydrated with a
graded acetone series, washed with an ethanol series, and dried with hexameth-
yldisilazane (HMDS). The coverslips were then mounted onto stubs using col-
loidal silver and were sputter coated with gold-palladium.
Virulence of wild-type V. furnissii and hly-oppA knockout mutant strains in
mice. BALB/c mice ranging from 8 to 12 weeks old were used as previously
described (38). Mice were anesthetized and injected subcutaneously with various
amounts (108 to ϳ1012 CFU) of the wild-type V. furnissii and VFYKW1 strains.
The numbers of surviving mice inoculated with various numbers of CFU were
then monitored for 1 month to determine the 50% lethal dose. Three mice were
used in each of the 50% lethal dose experiments, and the data represent three
independent experiments.
Nucleotide sequence accession number. The nucleotide sequence of the V.
furnissii hly-oppA gene has been deposited in the GenBank database under
accession number DQ777764.
RESULTS
Purification and determination of the sequence of the V.
furnissii protein with hemolytic activity. We obtained 877-fold
enrichment of the specific in vitro hemolytic activity of Hly-
OppA from growth media of V. furnissii (see Table S1 in the
supplemental material). Electrophoresis of the homogeneous
protein revealed a molecular mass of ϳ58 kDa as determined
by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis
(PAGE) (Fig. 1A). A single band at approximately 120 kDa
was found using nondenaturing PAGE, and the hemolytic ac-
tivity of this protein band suggested that it is a dimeric protein
under physiological conditions (Fig. 1B and 1C). Immunoblot
analysis revealed that both crude and purified proteins pro-
duced single bands (Fig. 1D).
To determine the protein’s identity, the purified protein was
subjected to both N-terminal determination and internal
amino acid sequence determination, and the corresponding
gene was cloned and sequenced. The N-terminal sequence was
AVVPAGTRLADVQEFVRNC. Three internal peptide se-
quences were IATAIQSMWK, VTYLPIENQVAEMNR, and
SNPLNFTLLYNTSENHK. The gene coding sequence was a
1,551-bp open reading frame that encodes a 516-amino-acid
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J. BACTERIOL.
FIG. 6. Scanning electron micrographs, biofilm productivity, and growth curves of wild-type V. furnissii and VFYKW1. (A) Micrograph of
wild-type V. furnissii exhibiting a rod-shaped morphology. Magnification, ϫ10,000. (B) Diplococcus-shaped VFYKW1 with a “dehydrated string”
morphology on the cellular surface. Magnification, ϫ10,000. (C) VFYKW2 exhibiting a rod-shaped morphology similar to that of the wild type.
(D) Comparison of biofilm production by wild-type V. furnissii (V. furnissii WT) and VFYKW1 (hly-oppA mutant). OD570, optical density at 570
nm. (E) Comparison of growth ratios of wild-type V. furnissii and VFYKW1. OD600, optical density at 600 nm.
polypeptide with a calculated molecular mass of 58,516 Da;
this molecular mass is comparable to the size of the protein
purified from the culture medium. A database search of these
sequences showed high sequence similarity to the oligopeptide
ABC transporter proteins which belong to bacterial extracel-
lular SBP family 5 (35). The deduced amino acid sequence had
91, 82, 73, and 71% identity to V. fluvialis OppA and the
ABC-type oligopeptide transporter sequences from Vibrio
cholerae, Vibrio vulnificus, and V. parahaemolyticus, respec-
tively. In addition, a conserved AESWETTDNKTFIFHLRK
NAKW sequence motif, homologous to the consensus se-
quence of bacterial extracellular SBP family 5, was identified
between amino acids 61 and 82. Compared to the sequence of
V. fluvialis OppA, however, a 27-amino-acid region of the
signal sequence was absent from the translated N-terminal
sequence of the purified protein, but the corresponding se-
quence was present in the DNA sequence. The extensive se-
quence homology of the purified protein to bacterial extracel-
lular SBP family 5 but not to the expected hemolysin sequence
reported so far is a very interesting finding. These results
prompted us to further investigate the solute binding, in vitro
hemolytic activity, morphological effects, and role in virulence
of the hly-oppA gene product.
Identification of the solute-binding function of the V. furnis-
sii Hly-OppA protein. To identify the solute-binding function
of Hly-OppA, we performed oligopeptide-binding, accumula-
tion of fluorescent substrate, and fluorescent substrate-antibi-
otic competition experiments. A 9-mer oligopeptide library
was first immunoblotted with the anti-Hly-OppA monoclonal
antibody and anti-mouse immunoglobulin-HRP conjugate to
exclude the possibility of nonspecific binding. The library was
then incubated with purified Hly-OppA protein and detected
with the above-mentioned primary and secondary antibodies.
The results showed that the 9-mer oligopeptide library exhib-
ited concentration-dependent binding, whereas no binding af-
finity was observed for the BSA protein (Fig. 2).
We then investigated the accumulation of the fluorescent
substrate of the hly-oppA gene product, using the wild-type V.
furnissii strain and the hly-oppA gene knockout mutant
(VFYKW1), as well as the strain with the hly-oppA gene trans-
formed into E. coli (YKWEC1) (Fig. 3). We assessed the
binding of EtBr and SYBR green (26) in a substrate compe-
tition assay by adding different concentrations of ampicillin to
EtBr and measuring the effect on the fluorescence emission
intensity. The results show that both EtBr and SYBR green
accumulation increased with time for both wild-type V. furnissii
and YKWEC1, but little effect was seen with VFYKW1 and
YKWEC2 (Fig. 4A to D). Moreover, adding different concen-
trations of ampicillin or SYBR green to the EtBr resulted in a
decrease in fluorescence intensity in a concentration-depen-
dent manner compared to the results with EtBr alone (Fig. 4E
and 4F), demonstrating the solute-binding activity of the
hly-oppA gene product.
Characterization of the in vitro hemolytic function and cy-
totoxicity of the V. furnissii Hly-OppA protein. To clearly dem-
onstrate the in vitro hemolytic activity and cytotoxicity of V.
furnissii Hly-OppA, we carried out blood agar and erythrocyte
lysis assays, mammalian cell cytotoxicity experiments, and
anti-Hly-OppA monoclonal antibody protection experiments.
Hemolytic activity was present on TSA plates incubated at
37°C with wild-type V. furnissii and VFYKW2 within 11 and
12 h, respectively, but was not present with VFYKW1 even
after 36 h of incubation, as shown in Fig. 5A. Incubation with
the purified protein also led to significant lysis of sheep eryth-
rocytes and release of hemoglobin as measured by a change in
absorbance at 540 nm (Fig. 5B). A decrease in erythrocyte lysis
VOL. 189, 2007
FUNCTIONAL CHARACTERIZATION OF V. FURNISSII Hly-OppA
8221
FIG. 7. Susceptibility to various antibiotics of (A) the wild-type V. furnissii and VFYKW1 knockout strains and (B) recombinant strains
YKWEC1 and YKWEC2. The concentrations of various antibiotics utilized in the experiment are described in Materials and Methods.
was observed when the protein was neutralized with anti-Hly-
OppA monoclonal antibody, suggesting that the monoclonal
antibody could block hemolytic activity (Fig. 5B). When mam-
malian CHO-K1 cells were treated with various concentrations
of purified Hly-OppA, morphological changes, including cell
detachment, loss of cell cytoplasm with cell shrinkage, and
reduction in nucleus size, were observed (Fig. 5C and D).
Cytotoxicity was also determined by measuring the amount of
lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) activity released into the me-
dium following destabilization of the plasma membrane and
the accumulation of LDH in the extracellular compartment
after addition of Hly-OppA. The amount of LDH found in the
culture medium after addition of 4 g/ml Hly-OppA was 80%
of the amount released after the addition of lysis buffer (Fig.
5E). Purified Hly-OppA exhibited host-specific activities
against various erythrocytes, with the highest hemolytic activity
against rabbit erythrocytes (100%) and lower activity against
mouse (61%), pig (60%), and human erythrocytes (11%),
demonstrating the in vitro hemolytic activity and cytotoxicity of
the Hly-OppA protein.
Determination of the morphology and biofilm production of
the V. furnissii hly-oppA knockout mutant. To investigate
whether the hly-oppA gene product affects the phenotype of V.
furnissii, we assessed morphology and biofilm production on
TSB. Scanning electron microscopy examination revealed that
the wild-type strain has a rod-shaped morphology, whereas the
knockout mutant forms diplococci (Fig. 6A and B). As ex-
pected, the cell morphology of a V. furnissii strain with hly-
oppA restored (VFYKW2) was the same as that of the wild-
type strain (Fig. 6C). We then examined whether the growth
rate and biofilm production of the V. furnissii hly-oppA mutant
differed from the growth rate and biofilm production of the
wild-type strain. The biofilm production of VFYKW1 was
about twice that of the wild-type (Fig. 6D), whereas the plank-
tonic cell numbers of the wild type were twice those of
VFYKW1 (Fig. 6E). These data suggest that the absence of the
hly-oppA gene affects both the cell growth rate and biofilm
production, as well as cell morphology.
Functional roles of the hly-oppA gene product in antibiotic
resistance and virulence. We next investigated the contribu-
8222
J. BACTERIOL.
WU ET AL.
gesting that the in vitro hemolytic activity may be prevalent in
Vibrio species with gene sequences homologous to hly-oppA.
DISCUSSION
FIG. 8. Characterization of in vitro hemolytic phenotypes of vari-
ous Vibrio homologous ABC transporter proteins cloned and overex-
pressed in E. coli. Section 1, pRSET (negative control); section 2,
pRSET-Hly-oppA from V. furnissii; section 3, pRSET-Hly-oppA from
V. fluvialis; section 4, pRSET-Hly-oppA from V. vulnificus; section 5,
pRSET-Hly-oppA from V. parahaemolyticus.
tion of the hly-oppA gene product to the development of mul-
tidrug resistance in both the wild-type V. furnissii strain and the
VFYKW1 knockout strain, as well as in E. coli, and the viru-
lence in mice. Discernible differences in antibiotic resistance
between the wild-type V. furnissii and VFYKW1 strains were
observed, with the latter exhibiting increased susceptibility,
when several antibiotics were tested (Fig. 7A). In addition, two
recombinant plasmids, pYKW1 and pYKW3, were con-
structed, transformed into E. coli BL21(DE3)(pLysS) cells,
and used to investigate the effects of different antibiotics. Sig-
nificant antibiotic resistance was also observed in E. coli cells
expressing Hly-OppA recombinant protein but not in E. coli
cells lacking this protein (Fig. 7B).
To investigate the virulence of hly-oppA in vivo, BALB/c
mice were injected with wild-type V. furnissii and VFYKW1
and the mortality rates were determined (11, 38). No patho-
genic effects were observed when 8 ϫ 1012 CFU of VFYKW1
was injected into mice, but the lethal dose of the V. furnissii
wild-type strain was 5 ϫ 109 CFU. These results indicate that
the hly-oppA gene is required for V. furnissii lethality in mice.
Determination of in vitro hemolytic activity of homologous
SBPs from other Vibrio species. Is the Hly-OppA protein se-
quence with in vitro hemolytic activity unique to V. furnissii, or
is it also present in homologous proteins from other Vibrio
species? To answer this question, the V. furnissii hly-oppA gene
and the homologous genes encoding ABC-type oligopeptide
transporter sequences from V. fluvialis, V. vulnificus, and V.
parahaemolyticus were each cloned into a chitinase signal se-
quence-derived pRSET vector. Apparent in vitro hemolytic
phenotypes were observed for all four pRSET-derived recom-
binant plasmids but not for the control plasmid (Fig. 8), sug-
There is increasing evidence for a connection between ABC-
type transporter proteins and bacterial virulence. A lipoprotein
that confers a hemolytic phenotype to E. coli and shows se-
quence homology to periplasmic siderophore-binding proteins
was identified in Campylobacter jejuni (29, 30). Disruption of
an oppB gene in Bacillus thuringiensis was reported to abolish
expression of the plcR regulon, a pleiotropic regulator of vir-
ulence factors in both B. thuringiensis and Bacillus cereus, and
resulted in a nonhemolytic phenotype of B. thuringiensis (14).
Further, a mutational study of the oppA gene of group A
streptococci also suggested that Opp plays an important role in
the pathogenesis of group A streptococcus infection, suggest-
ing that it has dual roles in the regulation of several virulence
genes and regulatory genes (38). However, no evidence di-
rectly indicating the involvement of OppA in virulence was
reported.
Acosta et al. reported that an OppA protein purified from
an E. coli K-12 strain exhibited resistance to various aminogly-
coside antibiotics (1). Moreover, nine potential drug transport-
ers belonging to resistance-nodulation-division-type systems,
drug efflux systems of the major facilitator, multidrug and toxic
compound extrusion systems, or ABC superfamilies in Salmo-
nella enterica have been hypothesized to play important roles in
multidrug resistance and virulence phenotypes (28). Finally, a
recently reported in vivo challenge of plague with the Yersinia
pestis OppA protein also suggested that antibody to OppA was
responsible for protection, although the functional role of
OppA in the virulence of Y. pestis and the mechanism by which
immunization with OppA provides protection against Y. pestis
remain unclear (36).
In the present study we report that a protein with in vitro
hemolytic activity containing an amino acid sequence that is
highly homologous to the ABC-type oligopeptide transporter
protein from other Vibrio species was purified from the V.
furnissii extracellular medium. The solute-binding function and
in vitro hemolytic activity of this protein, as well as its cytotox-
icity, were characterized using purified and recombinant pro-
teins, as well as anti-Hly-OppA monoclonal antibody protec-
tion experiments. An hly-oppA knockout mutant showed a
difference in fluorescent substrate accumulation and attenua-
tion of multiple drug resistance to various classes of antibiotics.
Both scanning electron microscopy investigation and determi-
nation of the mortality rate in BALB/c mice inoculated with
both wild-type V. furnissii and the knockout mutant revealed
effects on cellular morphology and pathogenesis. Since Hly-
OppA has multiple roles in allocrite transport, antibiotic resis-
tance, in vitro hemolysis, changes in morphology, and virulence
in mice, the role of this protein is obviously complicated. Fur-
ther studies are in progress to determine whether the virulence
and pathogenesis upon V. furnissii infection and the mode of
regulation affect Hly-OppA binding and subsequent molecular
interactions.
FUNCTIONAL CHARACTERIZATION OF V. FURNISSII Hly-OppA
VOL. 189, 2007
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We thank National Chiao Tung University and the MOE ATU
Program for financially supporting this research.
We are grateful to Yaw-Kuen Li and Michael Donnenberg for
supplying the expression vector, the pRSET vector, and the knockout
vector pCVD442. We also thank Yu-Ju Chen and Hsin-Kai Liao (Aca-
demia Sinica Institute of Chemistry, Taipei, Taiwan, Republic of
China) for kindly performing the internal amino acid sequence anal-
yses.
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