Abstract

Protein translocation across the cytoplasmic membrane is an essential process in all bacteria. The Sec system, comprising at its core an ATPase, SecA, and a membrane channel, SecYEG, is responsible for the majority of this protein transport. Recently, a second parallel Sec system has been described in a number of gram-positive species. This accessory Sec system is characterized by the presence of a second copy of the energizing ATPase, SecA2; where it has been studied, SecA2 is responsible for the translocation of a subset of Sec substrates. In common with many pathogenic gram-positive species, Clostridium difficile possesses two copies of SecA. Here, we describe the first characterization of the C. difficile accessory Sec system and the identification of its major substrates. Using inducible antisense RNA expression and dominant-negative alleles of secA1 and secA2, we demonstrate that export of the S-layer proteins (SLPs) and an additional cell wall protein (CwpV) is dependent on SecA2. Accumulation of the cytoplasmic precursor of the SLPs SlpA and other cell wall proteins was observed in cells expressing dominant-negative secA1 or secA2 alleles, concomitant with a decrease in the levels of mature SLPs in the cell wall. Furthermore, expression of either dominant-negative allele or antisense RNA knockdown of SecA1 or SecA2 dramatically impaired growth, indicating that both Sec systems are essential in C. difficile.

Highlights

  • AUGUST 5, 2011 VOLUME 286 NUMBER 31 proteins and the mechanisms of secretion employed by C. difficile are currently a subject of active research, and several candidate proteins have been identified

  • The S-layer is composed of two proteins, the high molecular weight (HMW)2 and low molecular weight (LMW) S-layer proteins (SLPs), derived by post-translational extracellular cleavage of the precursor SlpA [8]

  • In addition to the S-layer, C. difficile possesses a large family of noncovalently anchored cell wall proteins (CWPs) that are related to SlpA and are characterized by the presence of three Pfam04122 cell wall-binding motifs [10]

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Summary

To whom correspondence should be addressed

A parallel accessory Sec system has been described in a small number of Gram-positive species [23,24,25,26,27], characterized by the presence of a second copy of SecA, termed SecA2. Some of these species possess a second copy of SecY [28]. Using antisense RNA and protein expression techniques, we demonstrate that C. difficile has two essential Sec systems, a housekeeping system and an accessory system, and we identify SlpA and several CWPs as the major substrates of the accessory system

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