PLoS ONEplosplosonePLoS ONE1932-6203Public Library of ScienceSan Francisco, USAPONE-D-12-2127110.1371/journal.pone.0048320Research ArticleBiologyMicrobiologyBacterial pathogensGram negativeBacteriologyBacterial evolutionEmerging infectious diseasesHost-pathogen interactionMedical microbiologyMicrobial evolutionMicrobial mutationMicrobial pathogensPathogenesisSlime moldsModel organismsProtozoan modelsMedicineInfectious diseasesBacterial diseasesCholeraNeglected tropical diseasesCholeraInfectious DiseasesMicrobiologyConstitutive Type VI Secretion System Expression Gives Vibrio cholerae Intra- and Interspecific Competitive AdvantagesCompetition Mechanisms of V. choleraeUnterwegerDaniel1KitaokaMaya1¤aMiyataSarah T.1BachmannVerena1BrooksTeresa M.1MoloneyJessica1SosaOscar2¤bSilvaDavid2Duran-GonzalezJorge2ProvenzanoDaniele2PukatzkiStefan1*Department of Medical Microbiology and Immunology, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, CanadaDepartment of Biomedical Sciences, University of Texas Brownsville, Brownsville, Texas, United States of AmericaSoldatiThierryEditorUniversité de Genève, Switzerland* E-mail: spukatzki@ualberta.ca
The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
Conceived and designed the experiments: DU MK STM DP SP. Performed the experiments: DU MK STM VB TB JM OS DS JDG. Analyzed the data: DU MK STM VB TB JM OS DS JDG DP SP. Contributed reagents/materials/analysis tools: DP. Wrote the paper: DU MK DP SP.
Current address: Center for Immunology and Inflammatory Diseases, Massachusetts General Hospital, Charlestown, Massachusetts, United States of America
Current address: Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States of America
201226102012710e48320197201224920122012Unterweger et alThis is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
The type VI secretion system (T6SS) mediates protein translocation across the cell membrane of Gram-negative bacteria, including Vibrio cholerae – the causative agent of cholera. All V. cholerae strains examined to date harbor gene clusters encoding a T6SS. Structural similarity and sequence homology between components of the T6SS and the T4 bacteriophage cell-puncturing device suggest that the T6SS functions as a contractile molecular syringe to inject effector molecules into prokaryotic and eukaryotic target cells. Regulation of the T6SS is critical. A subset of V. cholerae strains, including the clinical O37 serogroup strain V52, express T6SS constitutively. In contrast, pandemic strains impose tight control that can be genetically disrupted: mutations in the quorum sensing gene luxO and the newly described regulator gene tsrA lead to constitutive T6SS expression in the El Tor strain C6706. In this report, we examined environmental V. cholerae isolates from the Rio Grande with regard to T6SS regulation. Rough V. cholerae lacking O-antigen carried a nonsense mutation in the gene encoding the global T6SS regulator VasH and did not display virulent behavior towards Escherichia coli and other environmental bacteria. In contrast, smooth V. cholerae strains engaged constitutively in type VI-mediated secretion and displayed virulence towards prokaryotes (E. coli and other environmental bacteria) and a eukaryote (the social amoeba Dictyostelium discoideum). Furthermore, smooth V. cholerae strains were able to outcompete each other in a T6SS-dependent manner. The work presented here suggests that constitutive T6SS expression provides V. cholerae with an advantage in intraspecific and interspecific competition.
Work in S.P.'s laboratory is supported by the Canadian Institute for Health Research Operating Grant MOP-84473 and Alberta Innovates-Health Solutions (funded by the Alberta Heritage Foundation for Medical Research Endowment Fund). D.P. was supported by National Institutes of Health grants MD001091-01 and GM068855-02 and an Olegario Rana fellowship. D.U. and S.T.M. were supported by Graduate Studentships from Alberta Innovates-Health Solutions. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.Introduction
The Gram-negative bacterium Vibrio cholerae is the causative agent of the acute diarrheal disease cholera and remains a serious health risk to humans. In addition to the two main virulence factors needed to cause massive watery diarrhea–cholera toxin [1] and the toxin coregulated pilus [2] –the bacterium utilizes accessory virulence factors also capable of causing diarrheal disease. Accessory toxins such as hemolysin (HlyA) and actin-cross-linking repeats-in-toxin (RtxA) have been reported to be virulence mechanisms exploited by some strains [3].
Another such accessory virulence factor is the type VI secretion system (T6SS), which confers cytotoxic effects against both prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells [4]–[6]. Bacteria have developed numerous mechanisms to export proteins, including toxins, across their cell walls into the surrounding environment or into host cells. To date, six distinctive pathways, collectively called secretion systems and classified into type I to type VI (T1SS – T6SS), have been identified in Gram-negative bacteria [7]. The T6SS of V. cholerae mediates cytotoxicity towards eukaryotic hosts, including murine macrophages [5], [8], [9] and the amoeba Dictyostelium discoideum[4]. The V. cholerae T6SS is encoded by three gene clusters on two separate chromosomes: one large cluster (VCA0107 – VCA0124) [10] and two small auxiliary clusters (VCA0017 – VCA0021 and VC1415 – VC1421). Bioinformatic analyses and a series of experimental approaches have elucidated the functions of several genes belonging to the V. cholerae T6SS clusters. For example, the Hcp protein [11], secreted by bacteria with a functional T6SS, forms a nanotube structure with an internal diameter of 4 nm [12]. Three VgrG proteins were shown to interact with each other to form a trimeric complex that structurally resembles a T4-bacteriophage gp5-gp27 tail spike complex [9], but unlike their phage counterparts lack an internal channel [13]. The current working model of the T6SS is based on these observations and the finding that Hcp and VgrG are codependent for secretion. The model proposes that the Hcp nanotube, decorated with a VgrG trimer at its top, is pushed through the bacterial envelope of the predator cell and into the prokaryotic or eukaryotic target cell. It is suggested that cytoplasmic VipA and VipB (VCA0107 and VCA0108) form a contractile sheath around the Hcp tube similar to the T4 phage outer sheath; contraction of the VipAB sheath ejects the Hcp tube from the predator cell [14]. The VgrG cap might mediate toxicity via the C-terminal extensions of evolved VgrGs upon delivery into the target cell [5]. Alternatively, the cap might dissociate from the Hcp nanotube to allow delivery of soluble toxin(s) or effector molecule(s) through the Hcp conduit [13]. VasH (VCA0117) acts as a sigma-54 activator protein and controls transcription of T6SS genes including hcp and vgrG. We recently reported that the V. cholerae T6SS also exerts contact-dependent killing properties against other Gram-negative bacteria such as Escherichia coli[6]. This finding suggests that V. cholerae may employ the T6SS to compete with commensal bacteria in the human intestine and/or environmental reservoirs.
10.1371/journal.pone.0048320.t001
Bacterial strains and plasmids.
Strain or plasmid
Description
Reference or source
Strains
Vibrio cholerae V52
O37 serogroup strain, ΔhapA, ΔrtxA, ΔhlyA, smR
[25]
Vibrio cholerae V52ΔvasK
V52 mutant lacking vasK (VCA0120)
[25]
DL2111, DL2112, DL4211, DL4215
Environmental isolates collected in this study (see Table 3).
Provenzano Laboratory (University of Texas at Brownsville)
Escherichia coli SM10λpir
KmR, thi-1, thr, leu, tonA, lacY, supE, recA::RP4-2-Tc::Mu, pir
Mekalanos Laboratory (Harvard Medical School)
Escherichia coli MG1655
F- lambda- ilvG- rfb-50 rph-1, RifR
Raivio Laboratory (University of Alberta)
Klebsiella pneumoniae
Wild-type. T6SS-negative control
Kessin Laboratory (Columbia University)
Plasmids
pBAD18 pBAD18-vasH::myc
pBAD vector, pBR322 ori, araC, KanR pBAD18 carrying vasH (VCA0117) of the Vibrio cholerae strain V52
[39][16]
pBAD24 pBAD24-vasK
pBAD vector, pBR322 ori, araC, AmpR pBAD24 carrying vasK (VCA0120) of the Vibrio cholerae strain V52
[39][6]
pWM91
oriR6K mobRP4 lacI ptac tnp mini-Tn10Km; Kmr Ampr
[23]
pGEM-T-easy
Vector for cloning PCR products, AmpR
Promega
The environmental reservoirs of V. cholerae (river deltas with brackish waters, oceans, and deep seas [15]) are as diverse as the genomic content of this bacterium. The V. cholerae pangenome is estimated to consist of ∼6,500 genes [16]. Because all V. cholerae genomes sequenced so far contain the three gene clusters encoding the T6SS, we conclude that the T6SS belongs to the 1,500-gene core genome. Although the T6SS appears to be conserved in V. cholerae, the system is regulated differently between strains. While the O37 serotype V52 strain expresses T6SS genes constitutively, the O1 El Tor strain C6706 represses its T6SS under laboratory conditions. Mutations in the genes encoding the transcriptional regulator TsrA (VC0070) and the quorum sensing system regulator LuxO (VC1021) are required for T6SS expression in C6706 under laboratory conditions [17]. Another El Tor strain, A1552, activates its T6SS when grown under high osmolarity conditions and/or low temperature [18]. A transcriptional regulator encoded within the T6SS gene–cluster is VasH (VCA0117). As a sigma-54 activator protein, VasH controls the expression of T6SS genes including hcp and vgrG[19], [20]. These differences in T6SS regulation led us to investigate whether V. cholerae strains employ constitutive or restricted T6SS regulation in defined environmental reservoirs. We focused on the Rio Grande, a river that empties into the Gulf of Mexico and is considered to be a major reservoir of unique, nonpandemic O1 El Tor strains responsible for sporadic food-borne cholera in the summer [21]. Environmental V. cholerae isolates (RGVCs) collected at two locations along the Rio Grande were examined to test whether constitutive T6SS expression is prevalent in V. cholerae exposed to microbial competitors and predators.
Materials and MethodsStrains and Culture Conditions
A streptomycin-resistant V. cholerae strain V52 (O37 serogroup) lacking hapA, rtxA, and hlyA genes [4] was used as a T6SS-positive strain in all experiments presented in this study. DH5αλpir and SM10λpir were used for cloning, and mating of pWM91-based plasmids, respectively. The strains and plasmids used in this study are listed in Table 1. Unless stated otherwise, bacteria were grown in a Luria-Bertani (LB) broth at 37°C with shaking (200 rpm). Rifampicin-resistant (50 µg·mL−1) Vibrio communis, Vibrio harveyi, and Pseudoalteromonas phenolica were grown in ½ YTSS broth (2.5 g·L−1 tryptone, 4 g·L−1 yeast extract, 20 g·L−1 sea salts (Sigma)) at 30°C. Antibiotic concentrations used to maintain the plasmids were 100 µg·mL−1 ampicillin or 50 µg·mL−1 kanamycin. D. discoideum AX3 cells were obtained from the Dicty Stock Center and maintained in liquid culture (HL5) with shaking (150 rpm) at 22°C [22]. Environmental bacteria were collected by submerging a Turtox tow net (Envco, New Zealand) with a 20 µm pore-size Nitex mesh spanning a 30.48 cm diameter mouth in estuary water for one minute. Water samples (200 mL) collected from estuaries of the Rio Grande delta were blended with a handheld homogenizer (PRO Scientific; Oxford, CT), and vacuum filtered through Whatman filter paper number 3 (GE Healthcare, Little Chalfont, UK). A second vacuum filtration was performed on the filtrate through 0.45 µM pore-size membranes (Millipore, Bedford, MA). Filters were incubated separately in a small volume of 0.15 M sterile NaCl for one hour shaking at RT. The suspensions were plated on thiosulfate-citrate-bile salts-sucrose (TCBS) agar (BD, Franklin Lakes, NJ) and/or marine agar 2216 (BD, Franklin Lakes, NJ). Following incubation for 16 hours at 30°C, colony forming units (CFUs) were isolated and cultured in LB broth. A polymorphic 22-kb region was sequenced for both isolates, DL2111 and DL2112, for strain identification. Sequences were submitted to GenBank (accession number JX669612 and JX669613).
10.1371/journal.pone.0048320.t003
RGVC isolates.
DL Number
Serogroup
VasH sequence compared to V52
2111
None (rough)
frameshift, H116D, Q278L, T449A, T456I
2112
None (rough)
frameshift, H116D, Q278L, T449A, T456I
4211
O123
H116D, T449A
4215
O113
H116D, T441S, P447S, T449V
N16961
O1
H116D, T449A
DNA Sequence Analysis and Protein Structure Prediction Analysis
Nucleotide sequence analyses and alignments were performed with MacVector software (version 11.0.2).
10.1371/journal.pone.0048320.g001
Ability of RGVC isolates to kill E. coli. Rough RGVC isolates DL2111 and DL2112, and smooth RGVC isolates DL4211 and DL4215 were tested for their ability to confer T6SS-mediated prokaryotic killing.
V52 and V52ΔvasK were used as virulent and avirulent controls, respectively. V. cholerae and E. coli were mixed in a 10∶1 ratio and incubated for 4 hours at 37°C. Bacterial spots were resuspended, serially diluted, and plated on E. coli-selective media to determine the number of surviving E. coli. The averages and standard deviations of two independent experiments, each performed in duplicates are shown.
16S Ribosomal Sequencing
Primers binding to conserved 16S ribosomal gene sequences were used to PCR-amplify the 16S ribosomal sequences from environmental bacterial isolates. Primer sequences are summarized in Table 2. DNA sequencing was performed at the University of Alberta Applied Genomics Centre and species were identified using BLASTn.
10.1371/journal.pone.0048320.g002
RGVC isolates with a constitutive T6SS kill D. discoideum.
103D. discoideum cells were plated with indicated bacteria on SM/5 agar plates that support bacterial but not amoeboid growth. Plaques formed by D. discoideum were counted on the third day of incubation. The graph summarizes the results of two independent experiments. Standard deviations are shown. KP: Klebsiella pneumoniae.
Protein Secretion Profiles
Overnight cultures of bacterial strains were diluted to 1∶100 in 3 mL of fresh LB containing appropriate antibiotics and incubated until they reached late mid-logarithmic growth phase (OD600 ∼0.6). L-arabinose (0.1%) was added to induce expression of the PBAD promoter in pBAD24 and pBAD18. Bacteria were pelleted at high speed in a tabletop microcentrifuge for 5 minutes. Supernatants were filtered through 0.22 µm low protein-binding polyvinylidine fluoride (PVDF) syringe filters (Millipore). Proteins were precipitated with 20% trichloroacetic acid (TCA) for 15 minutes on ice, pelleted by centrifugation at 14,000× g for 5 minutes at 4°C, and washed twice with ice-cold acetone to remove residual TCA. Protein pellets were resuspended in 40 µL SDS-PAGE lysis buffer (40% glycerol; 0.24 M Tris-HCl, pH 6.8; 8% SDS; 0.04% bromophenol blue; 5% β-mercaptoethanol) and boiled for 10 minutes. 300 µL of bacterial culture was centrifuged at 14,000× g for 5 minutes. Bacterial pellets were resuspended in an equal volume of lysis buffer and boiled for 10 minutes. Samples were subjected to SDS-PAGE (10% acrylamide) and analyzed by western blotting using a rabbit polyclonal antibody against DnaK (Stressgen, diluted 1∶15,000), mouse anti-RNAP (Neoclone, diluted1∶1000), mouse anti-beta-lactamase (Sigma, diluted 1∶200), and polyclonal rabbit anti-Hcp [5] antiserum (diluted 1∶500). Secondary antibodies used were goat anti-mouse horseradish peroxidase (HRP) and goat anti-rabbit HRP (both Santa Cruz, diluted 1∶3000).
10.1371/journal.pone.0048320.g003
RGVC isolates differ in T6SS regulation.
Indicated RGVC isolates and V52 (positive control) were cultured to midlogarithmic phase of growth followed by centrifugal separation of pellets and culture supernatants. Supernatant portions were concentrated by TCA precipitation and both fractions were subjected to SDS-PAGE followed by western blotting using the antibodies indicated. Experiments were repeated at least three times with equivalent results.
D. discoideum Plaque Assays
100 µL of overnight bacterial culture and 103D. discoideum AX3 cells were spread on SM/5 plates [22]. Arabinose (0.1%) was added to SM/5 plates when indicated. Plates were incubated at 22°C for 3 days to assess the number of plaques.
10.1371/journal.pone.0048320.g004
Complementation of a vasK null-mutation restores T6SS-dependent secretion and virulence.
(A) VasK-mutants of smooth RGVC isolates carrying a plasmid for arabinose-induced vasK expression were cultured to midlogarithmic phase of growth in the presence or absence of 0.1% arabinose. V52 and the isogenic vasK mutant were used as positive and negative controls, respectively. Pellets and culture supernatants were separated by centrifugation. The supernatant portions were concentrated by TCA precipitation and both fractions were subjected to SDS-PAGE followed by western blotting using the antibodies indicated. (B) Survival of E. coli MG1655 after mixing with V. cholerae. V. cholerae and E. coli were mixed in a 10∶1 ratio and incubated for 4 hours at 37°C before the resulting spots were resuspended, serially diluted, and plated on E. coli-selective media. Data represent the averages of three independent experiments. Standard deviations are included. (C) Survival of D. discoideum after mixing with V. cholerae. D. discoideum was plated with V. cholerae and the number of plaques formed by surviving D. discoideum were counted after a 3-day incubation at 22°C. Data are representative of three independent experiments. Standard deviations are shown.
Bacterial Killing Assay
Bacterial strains were grown as lawns on LB-agar plates with appropriate antibiotics. Environmental non-V. cholerae strains were grown on 1/2 YTSS agar plates with appropriate antibiotics. Streptomycin-resistant (rifampicin-sensitive) predator and rifampicin-resistant (streptomycin-sensitive) prey were harvested and mixed at a 10∶1 ratio with volumes normalized by OD600 readings. 25 µL of the mixed bacterial culture was spotted onto prewarmed LB-agar (or 1/2 YTSS agar plates for mixtures containing non-V. cholerae strains) and incubated at 37°C (or 30°C for non-V. cholerae strains) for 4 h. Bacterial spots were harvested and the CFU·mL−1 of surviving prey and predator were measured by serial dilution and selective growth on agar containing 50 µg·mL−1 rifampicin and 100 µg·mL−1 streptomycin, respectively. Where applicable, arabinose was added to LB plates at a final concentration of 0.1% to induce expression from the PBAD promoter during the 4 hour incubation.
10.1371/journal.pone.0048320.g005
Alignment of VasH polypeptide sequences of RGVC isolates.
VasH of V52, N16961, and four RGVC isolates were aligned. In the rough isolates, a guanine was inserted at position 157 of vasH to restore the open reading frame. Colored bars indicate substitutions compared to VasH from V52.
DNA manipulations
3′-Myc-tagged vasH was PCR-amplified from V. cholerae V52 chromosomal DNA with primers 5′vasH and 3′vasH::myc (Table 1). The resulting PCR product was restricted with 5′-EcoRI and 3′-XbaI, cloned into pGEM T-easy (Promega), and subcloned into pBAD18.
10.1371/journal.pone.0048320.g006
VasH complementation restores Hcp synthesis but not secretion in rough RGVC isolates.
V. cholerae isolates were transformed with pBAD18-vasH::myc. The isolates were cultured to midlogarithmic phase of growth in the presence or absence of 0.1% arabinose. Pellets and culture supernatants were separated by centrifugation. The supernatant portions were concentrated by TCA precipitation and both fractions were subjected to SDS-PAGE followed by western blotting using the antibodies indicated. Data are representative of three independent experiments.
In-frame deletion of vasK was performed as described by Metcalf et al. [23] using the pWM91-based vasK knockout construct [9]. During sucrose selection, sucrose concentration was increased from 6% to 20% for all RGVC gene deletions because these isolates exhibited increased tolerance to sucrose compared to V52.
10.1371/journal.pone.0048320.g007
RGVC isolates kill bacterial neighbors.
V. cholerae and prey bacteria were mixed in a 10∶1 ratio and incubated on ½ YTSS agar for 4 hours at 30°C. Bacterial spots were resuspended, serially diluted, and plated on selective YTSS agar to determine the number of surviving prey. The average and standard deviations of three independent experiments, each performed in duplicates, are shown.
For complementation, vasK was amplified from V52 chromosomal DNA using primers 5′-vasK-pBAD24 and 3′-vasK-pBAD24 (Table 1). The resulting PCR product was purified using the Qiagen PCR cleanup kit, digested with EcoRI and XbaI, and cloned into pBAD24.
10.1371/journal.pone.0048320.g008
T6SS-dependent competition among V. cholerae isolates.
(A–C) Smooth V. cholerae isolates successfully competed with each other and outcompeted the rough isolates in a T6SS-dependent manner. All combinations among the isolates and their isogenic vasK mutants were tested in a killing assay: Predator- and prey-V. cholerae were mixed in a 10∶1 ratio and incubated for 4 hours at 37°C. Bacterial spots were resuspended, serially diluted, and plated on selective media to determine the number of surviving prey. The number of surviving prey in the presence of T6SS+ or T6SS− predator are shown. (D) Arrows indicate the competitive relationship between isolates such that the arrow points from the predator towards the prey. Arrow thickness indicates relative killing efficiency. T6SS-dependence of the killing phenotype was confirmed by employing the vasK-deficient predator of each V. cholerae isolate examined. To avoid killing of the predator, vasK-deficient prey of smooth T6SS+ isolates were used. The average and standard deviations of two independent experiments, each performed in duplicates, are shown.
10.1371/journal.pone.0048320.t004
Secretion and virulence phenotypes of RGVC isolates.
We previously demonstrated that clinical V. cholerae O37 serogroup strain V52 uses its T6SS to kill E. coli and Salmonella Typhimurium [6]. To determine the role of the T6SS in environmental strains, we employed two different types of V. cholerae isolated from the Rio Grande: smooth isolates with distinct O-antigens as part of their lipopolysaccharides (LPS), and rough isolates that lack O-antigen (Table 3). Due to concerns that rough bacteria are genetically unstable because the lack of O-antigen allows the uptake of chromosomal DNA [24], we assessed the virulence potential of two separately isolated but genetically identical rough isolates DL2111 and DL2112 (as determined by deep sequencing (Illumina platform) of a polymorphic 22-kb fragment [Genbank accession numbers JX669612 and JX669613]) to minimize the chance of phenotypic variation due to genetic exchange.
To determine whether environmental RGVC V. cholerae are capable of killing bacteria, we performed an E. coli killing assay (Figure 1). RGVC isolates and E. coli strain MG1655 were spotted on LB nutrient agar plates, and the number of surviving MG1655 cells was determined after a 4-hour incubation at 37°C. V52 and V52ΔvasK were used as virulent and avirulent controls, respectively. The presence of V52 resulted in an average ∼5-log reduction of viable E. coli. Smooth isolates DL4211 and DL4215 killed E. coli at levels comparable to V52 (Figure 1). In contrast, both rough isolates, DL2111 and DL2112, were unable to kill E. coli prey. In summary, smooth RGVC isolates readily killed E. coli while rough RGVC isolates appeared to be attenuated.
RGVC Isolates Display T6SS-Mediated Virulence Towards D. discoideum
The clinical V. cholerae O37 serogroup strain V52 displays T6SS-dependent cytotoxicity towards the social amoeba D. discoideum[4]. We tested whether RGVC isolates were also capable of evading amoeboid grazing by killing the eukaryotic predator. RGVC isolates were plated together with amoebae on nutrient agar plates that exclusively support bacterial growth. For amoebae to survive on agar plates, they must obtain nutrients from phagocytosed bacteria. This amoeboid grazing behavior on bacteria results in the formation of plaques–clear zones in the bacterial lawn that are devoid of bacteria [25]. The T6SS mediates bacterial virulence towards D. discoideum and abrogates plaque formation. Wild-type V52 and Klebsiella pneumoniae were used as virulent (no plaques) and avirulent (plaque formation) controls, respectively. Smooth isolates DL4211 and DL4215 killed D. discoideum at levels comparable to V52. In contrast, rough DL2111 and DL2112 did not kill D. discoideum similar to the T6SS-null mutant V52ΔvasK and the avirulent Klebsiella pneumoniae negative control (Figure 2).
Expression of Hcp in RGVC Isolates
Next, we set out to test whether RGVC isolates were able to produce and secrete the T6SS hallmark protein Hcp because experimental results presented thus far suggested that V. cholerae's ability to kill bacterial competitors or eukaryotic predators [6] could be mediated by the T6SS. As shown in Figure 3, smooth isolates DL4211 and DL4215 produced Hcp at sufficient levels to be detected by western blots probed with Hcp antiserum. In contrast, rough isolates did not produce or secrete Hcp. The presence of Hcp correlated with virulence as the smooth isolates secreted Hcp (Figure 3) and killed E. coli (Figure 1) as well as D. discoideum (Figure 2), while rough isolates did not produce Hcp and appeared to be attenuated.
RGVC Isolates Engage in T6SS-Mediated Secretion and Virulence
To determine whether killing of E. coli (Figure 1) and D. discoideum (Figure 2) depends on a functional T6SS, we performed killing assays and plaque assays with DL4211ΔvasK and DL4215ΔvasK as a predator. VasK is an inner membrane protein believed to provide the energy for T6SS-mediated secretion [26], [27]. VasK is, therefore, crucial for a functional T6SS. As shown in figure 4A, parental V52, DL4211, and DL4215 constitutively produced and secreted Hcp, while deletion of vasK blocked secretion but not synthesis of Hcp. To complement the vasK chromosomal deletion, vasK from V52 was cloned downstream of an arabinose-inducible promoter in the plasmid pBAD24 and introduced into DL4211ΔvasK (DL4211ΔvasK/pvasK) and DL4215ΔvasK (DL4215ΔvasK/pvasK). Trans complementation of vasK restored Hcp secretion in V52 and the two smooth isolates (Figure 4A). To assess the role of T6SS in killing E. coli, we incubated E. coli with various V. cholerae isolates and determined the number of surviving E. coli after a 4-hour incubation at 37°C (Figure 4B). VasK mutants of V52, DL4211, and DL4215 lost their ability to kill E. coli, but providing vasK in trans restored virulence. Furthermore, amoebae were unable to form plaques in lawns of V52, DL4211, and DL4215, but did so in lawns of V52ΔvasK, DL4211ΔvasK and DL4215ΔvasK (Figure 4C). Complemented isolates, V52ΔvasK/pvasK, DL4211ΔvasK/pvasK and DL4215ΔvasK/pvasK, regained virulence towards D. discoideum (Figure 4C). Although the wild-type phenotype of DL4211 could not be fully complemented by episomal expression of vasK, the complemented phenotype is statistically significant (unpaired t-test, p = 0.0116). We conclude that smooth RGVC isolates conferred T6SS-mediated virulence towards E. coli and D. discoideum, demonstrating that the virulence phenotype described in Figures 1 and 2 is T6SS-dependent.
Rough RGVC Isolates Carry Unique vasH Sequences
We previously showed that the global transcriptional activator VasH is essential for expression of hcp and other T6SS genes. As the rough isolates failed to synthesize Hcp (Figure 3), we tested whether these isolates carried a nonfunctional vasH allele. The 1594 nucleotide-long vasH sequences of V52 and RGVC isolates were PCR-amplified and their polypeptide sequences aligned. The rough RGVC isolates were missing a guanine in codon 157 (ΔG157) which resulted in a frameshift. To include vasH of the rough isolates in our comparative analysis, we restored the vasH reading frame by in-silico insertion of G157. We found that all RGVC VasH sequences aligned with V52 and N16961 as well as with each other (Figure 5). Therefore, vasH is conserved in environmental (RGVC), pandemic (N16961), and endemic (V52) V. cholerae strains. The repaired vasH open reading frame closely resembled vasH from N16961 with only two unique substitutions (Q278L and T456I). Smooth RGVC isolate DL4211 carried an intact VasH gene identical to N16961; DL4215 differed from N16961 and V52 by three and four residues, respectively (Table 3). Substitutions of histidine to aspartic acid at position 116 (H116D) and threonine to alanine at position 449 (T449A) appear to be common substitutions that are also present in N16961 (Figure 5). In conclusion, RGVC isolates carry a VasH gene related to the El Tor version with the characteristic D116 and A449 residues (Figure 5). However, rough V. cholerae isolates carried a nonsense mutation and are likely to produce a truncated 63 amino acid-long VasH mutant protein.
VasH Complementation in Rough RGVC Isolates
We tested whether heterologous expression of vasH in the T6SS-silent RGVC isolates DL2111 and DL2112 restored T6SS-dependent protein synthesis/secretion. Myc-tagged vasH from V52 was cloned into pBAD18 to episomally express vasH. V52ΔvasH/pBAD18-vasH::myc was used as a control for the arabinose-dependent expression of vasH. As shown in Figure 6, episomal vasH::myc expression in V52ΔvasH induced Hcp production and subsequent secretion, while only synthesis but not secretion was restored in the rough RGVC isolates.
Smooth RGVC Isolates Use Their T6SS to Compete with Natural Neighbors
Because RGVC isolates with active T6SSs kill E. coli, we hypothesized that RGVC isolates use their T6SS to compete with other bacteria in their environmental niche. To test this hypothesis, we isolated three environmental bacterial non-V. cholerae strains from estuaries where the Rio Grande meets the Gulf of Mexico. Sequencing of 16S-rRNA identified these bacterial species as Vibrio communis, Vibrio harveyi, and Pseudoalteromonas phenolica (data not shown). We then tested whether DL4211 and DL4215 were able to kill these environmental bacteria in a T6SS-dependent fashion. As shown in Figure 7, both DL4211 and DL4215 killed all three environmental isolates. The observed killing required a functional T6SS, as isogenic vasK mutants lost their ability to kill. Killing of the environmental bacteria was restored by complementing the vasK mutant backgrounds with episomal vasK in trans. Therefore, we propose that constitutive expression of T6SS genes provides smooth RGVC isolates with the means to kill both their bacterial neighbors and potential eukaryotic predators.
Smooth RGVC Isolates Use Their T6SS for Intraspecific Competition
V. cholerae O37 strain V52 kills E. coli and S. Typhimurium, but is unable to kill other V. cholerae, including the O1 serogroup N16961 (El Tor) and O395 (classical biotype) strains [6]. Accordingly, the T6SS+ isolates V52, DL4211 and DL4215 also exhibited immunity, because we did not observe a decline in viable CFUs when we recovered these isolates from single-isolate spots on LB agar plates after a 4-hour incubation (data not shown). We hypothesized that V. cholerae employs an immunity system that provides protection against T6SS-mediated toxicity. A functional link between T6SS and toxin/antitoxin systems has been established in Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Burkholderia species [28], [29], which employ antitoxin proteins to counteract T6SS effectors [28]. VCA0124, an open reading frame downstream of the T6SS effector gene vgrG3 (VCA0123), has been implicated as an antitoxin gene in V. cholerae[30]. As RGVCs killed close relatives such as V. harveyi (Figure 7), we wondered if the RGVC isolates have the ability to kill each other. We hypothesized that if RGVC isolates use different toxins (and antitoxins), the T6SS might be used for intraspecific competition. We predicted that immunity of an RGVC isolate would be lost when approached by a V. cholerae bacterium with a different set of T6SS toxins to which the former lacks the corresponding antitoxin gene. To test this hypothesis, we mixed V52, DL4211, and DL4215 (predators) with smooth and rough RGVC isolates as prey bacteria. To eliminate the killing activity of smooth T6SS+ prey, we used vasK-deficient mutants with a disabled T6SS as prey. Rough wild-type RGVC isolates were used as prey since they do not express Hcp (Figure 3) and are thus T6SS-negative. Following a 4-hour coincubation, we determined the number of surviving prey. T6SS-negative prey bacteria were not killed by their isogenic T6SS+ parent strain, but were killed by other T6SS+ isolates (Figure 8A–C). Exposure to a predator with a disabled T6SS resulted in about 108 surviving prey bacteria. Similar numbers of surviving prey were obtained when the prey was mixed with an isogenic strain that was marked with a different antibiotic resistance cassette (data not shown). Thus, killing of T6SS-negative prey required a functional T6SS. Surprisingly, the vasK mutant of DL4215 displayed virulence towards V52ΔvasK, but not against DL4211ΔvasK or a differently-marked DL4215ΔvasK sister strain (Figure 8C). Since DL4215ΔvasK does not kill V. communis, V. harveyi, or P. phenolica (Figure 7), we hypothesize that DL4215 exhibits some degree of selective T6SS-independent antimicrobial activity against V52ΔvasK.
In conclusion, V. cholerae uses its T6SS not solely for competition with bacterial neighbors (Figure 7), but also for competition within its own species (Figure 8D).
Discussion
We examined environmental smooth and rough V. cholerae isolates (RGVCs) collected at two locations along the Rio Grande to study T6SS regulation in V. cholerae exposed to microbial competitors and predators.
Our study showed that smooth RGVC isolates use their T6SS to kill other Gram-negative bacteria isolated from the Rio Grande delta. Deletion of the T6SS gene vasK resulted in a loss of bacterial killing. Importantly, the killing phenotype was restored by vasK complementation in trans. The requirement of VasK for killing implies that a constitutively active T6SS provides smooth RGVC isolates with a competitive advantage compared to their bacterial neighbors. By killing other bacteria, RGVC isolates might enhance their own survival in their environmental niche. In addition, we found that V. cholerae isolates use their T6SS to compete against each other.
In our experiments, Hcp synthesis and secretion correlated with eukaryotic and prokaryotic host cell killing (Table 4). For example, smooth Hcp-secreting RGVC isolates DL4211 and DL4215 (Figure 3) displayed full virulence towards E. coli (Figure 1) and D. discoideum (Figure 2). Rough RGVC isolates with their frameshift mutations in the T6SS transcriptional activator gene vasH did not produce or secrete Hcp, and their virulence was attenuated. Sequencing and gene alignments of the T6SS transcriptional activator vasH in rough strains indicated a missing guanine at position 157 in rough isolates, resulting in a frameshift mutation. Because VasH was recently implicated in regulating both the large and auxiliary T6SS gene clusters in V. cholerae O395 [20], we speculated that the vasH frameshift mutation in the rough isolates silences T6SS expression. However, trans-complementation of the vasH mutation by episomal expression of V52′s vasH restored synthesis but not secretion of the T6SS hallmark protein Hcp (Figure 6). Trans-complementation with vasH from N16961, which is more closely related to vasH from RGVC isolates DL2111 and DL2112 (Figure 5), restores Hcp synthesis and secretion in a vasH mutant of V52, but only restores Hcp synthesis (and not secretion) in a vasH mutant of N16961 [19]. Thus, we believe that the inability to restore Hcp secretion in rough strains is not a reflection of the polymorphic nature of VasH.
At this time, it is unclear whether selective pressures for T6SS regulation exist that drive constitutive T6SS expression in smooth isolates and disable T6SSs in rough V. cholerae strains. V. cholerae LPS's O-antigen has been shown to induce protective immune responses in humans and experimental animals [31]–[35]. To counteract the host immune response, V. cholerae may use its T6SS to kill phagocytic immune cells such as macrophages [9]. Because rough isolates lacking O-antigen are frequently isolated from convalescent cholera patients [36], repression of O-antigen biosynthesis may represent an immune evasion mechanism for V. cholerae[37]. Such evasion would allow the pathogen to persist in the host, perhaps in a subclinical state as rough V. cholerae have been shown to be avirulent. In this scenario, rough V. cholerae does not require a functional T6SS, but tolerates mutations that disable its expression. Rough isolates have been shown to revert to a smooth, virulent state [37] but it remains to be determined whether newly reverted smooth bacteria restore expression of their disabled T6SSs. We did not observe restoration of the T6SS in rough isolates through uptake and homologous recombination of chromosomal DNA from a T6SS+ donor, because rough isolates remained T6SS-negative in the presence of smooth T6SS+V. cholerae strain V52 (data not shown).
El Tor strains possess a tightly controlled T6SS [17] and thus differ from the smooth RGVCs that express the T6SS constitutively. As pandemic strains are believed to originate from environmental strains, we speculate that constitutive T6SS expression is prevalent in V. cholerae exposed to microbial competitors and predators until virulence factors such as cholera toxin and toxin-coregulated pilus genes are acquired. However, how pandemic V. cholerae regulate expression of T6SS during their complex life cycle remains to be determined.
It is becoming increasingly clear from our investigation and other reports [6], [28]–[30], [38] that T6SS-expressing V. cholerae deploy bactericidal effector proteins. Therefore, T6SS expression is likely tied to a protective mechanism, a form of T6SS-immunity that prevents the effector proteins from harming bacteria within a clonal population. We postulate that V52, DL4211, and DL4215 employ unique sets of toxin/antitoxin gene products and therefore form distinct compatibility groups. Members of a T6SS compatibility group could coexist because they encode antitoxins that match the cognate toxins. Conversely, members of different T6SS compatibility groups kill each other since the antitoxins of one compatibility group do not protect against the toxins of the other group. Hence, T6SS-mediated selective interstrain killing allows V. cholerae to distinguish self from nonself. This form of kin selection may permit the evolution of distinct lineages, including those that give rise to toxigenic strains. The observations presented in this study indicate that the T6SS contributes to V. cholerae's pathogenesis and fitness by providing an advantage in interspecific competition with eukaryotes or prokaryotes, and intraspecific competition with V. cholerae strains.
The authors thank Tracy Raivio for helpful discussions, Marcia Craig for critically reviewing the manuscript, and Andrea Schwarzbach for her bioinformatics support. We acknowledge the Dicty Stock Center for providing the D. discoideum strain AX3 used in this study.
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