Abstract

Many microorganisms excrete typical cytoplasmic proteins into the culture supernatant. As none of the classical secretion systems appears to be involved, this type of secretion was referred to as "nonclassical protein secretion." Here, we demonstrate that in Staphylococcus aureus the major autolysin plays a crucial role in release of cytoplasmic proteins. Comparative secretome analysis revealed that in the wild type S. aureus strain, 22 typical cytoplasmic proteins were excreted into the culture supernatant, although in the atl mutant they were significantly decreased. The presence or absence of prophages had little influence on the secretome pattern. In the atl mutant, secondary peptidoglycan hydrolases were increased in the secretome; the corresponding genes were transcriptionally up-regulated suggesting a compensatory mechanism for the atl mutation. Using glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) as a cytoplasmic indicator enzyme, we showed that all clinical isolates tested excreted this protein. In the wall teichoic acid-deficient tagO mutant with its increased autolysis activity, GAPDH was excreted in even higher amounts than in the WT, confirming the importance of autolysis in excretion of cytoplasmic proteins. To answer the question of how discriminatory the excretion of cytoplasmic proteins is, we performed a two-dimensional PAGE of cytoplasmic proteins isolated from WT. Surprisingly, the most abundant proteins in the cytoplasm were not found in the secretome of the WT, suggesting that there exists a selection mechanism in the excretion of cytoplasmic proteins. As the major autolysin binds at the septum site, we assume that the proteins are preferentially released at and during septum formation.

Highlights

  • Cytoplasmic proteins, which lack a signal sequence, were present [5, 7, 8]

  • We show here that the major autolysin (Atl) plays a crucial role in excretion of cytoplasmic proteins, that the excretion of cytoplasmic proteins appears to be a general phenomenon in clinical isolates of S. aureus and S. epidermidis, and that excretion of proteins is not random

  • To investigate the contribution of lytic processes in release of cytoplasmic proteins, we carried out a comparative secretome analysis

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Summary

EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES

Preparation of Different Protein Fractions for Two-dimensional PAGE—Cells from SA113 and its atl deletion mutant were grown in B-medium as described before, harvested after 8 h of growth, and pelleted by centrifugation at 8000 ϫ g for 30 min at 4 °C. Northern Blot Analyses—The cells of the WT S. aureus SA113, the isogenic atl mutant, and the complemented strain were grown in B-medium as described earlier and were harvested after 3, 6, and 8 h of growth. Preparation of Protein Extracts for Western Blot Analysis— Cells (Table 1)were grown for 2, 4, 6, 8, 14, 24, and 48 h in B-medium and pelleted by centrifugation at 5000 rpm for 30 min at 4 °C. For determination of GAPDH in the supernatant of different S. aureus WT strains, the cells were pelleted, and the supernatant proteins were concentrated using StrataCleanTM resin (Stratagene, Heidelberg, Germany) prior to gel electrophoresis.

RESULTS
30 S ribosomal protein S2
DISCUSSION
CONCLUSION
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