Abstract

The zwitterionic phospho-forms phosphoethanolamine and phosphocholine are recognized as influential and important substituents of pathogen cell surfaces. PilE, the major pilin subunit protein of the type IV pilus (Tfp) colonization factor of Neisseria gonorrhoeae undergoes unique, post-translational modifications with these moieties. These phospho-form modifications have been shown to be O-linked alternately to a specific, conserved serine residue of PilE. However, the enzymes and precursors involved in their addition are unknown, and the full spectrum of PilE post-translational modifications has yet to be defined. Here, an intact protein-based mass spectrometric approach was integrated with bioinformatics and reverse genetics to address these matters. Specifically we show that a protein limited in its distribution to pathogenic Neisseria species and structurally related to enzymes implicated in phosphoethanolamine modification of lipopolysaccharide is necessary for PilE covalent modification with phosphoethanolamine and phosphocholine. These findings strongly suggest that protein phospho-form modification is mechanistically similar to processes underlying analogous modifications of prokaryotic saccharolipid glycans. We also show that PilE undergoes multisite and hierarchical phospho-form modifications and that the stoichiometries of site occupancy can be influenced by PilE primary structure and the abundance of the pilin-like protein PilV. Together, these findings have important implications for the structure and antigenicity of PilE.

Highlights

  • Type IV pili (Tfp)4 are proteinaceous polymeric filaments that serve critical roles in disease pathogenesis and prokaryotic cell biology in many Gram-negative species

  • For N. gonorrhoeae and N. meningitidis Tfp, such concerns are complicated by the extensive antigenic variability of the PilE pilin subunit that arises due to gene conversion-like events between a single expression

  • N. gonorrhoeae PilE glycosylation requires at least three gene products highly related to those implicated in the biosynthesis of the proximal bacillosamine component of N-linked glycans in Campylobacter jejuni glycoproteins [12]

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Summary

EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES

E. coli and gonococcal strains were grown as described [33]. E. coli HB101 was used for plasmid propagation and cloning experiments. To introduce an alanine substitution at residue 68 of PilE, the Bsu36I-StuI fragment from the plasmid pIga::pilES68A [12] was SEPTEMBER 22, 2006 VOLUME 281 NUMBER 38

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