Interactions of Bacillus subtilis Basement Spore Coat Layer Proteins
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Bacterial Strains and Growth Conditions
2.2. Construction of Bacillus Subtilis yncD Strain
2.3. Analysis of Protein–Protein Interactions Using a Bacterial Two Hybrid System (BACTH)
2.4. Protein Expression and Purification and Pull-Down Assay
2.5. Spore Preparation
2.6. Germination Assay
2.7. Thermal Resistance Assay
2.8. Fluorescence Microscopy
3. Results
3.1. Examination of Protein-Protein Interactions Using a Bacterial Two Hybrid System
- YncD contacts with morphogenetic coat proteins: YncD, an alanine racemase, is deposited onto a developing forespore under the control of CotE, as reported by McKenney [2]. Using BACTH, we observed that YncD physically contacts CotE. Screening all possible combinations of plasmids with the cotE and yncD genes fused to either the T18 or T25 domains of adenylate cyclase in plate assays showed that the highest expression of the β-galactosidase reporter gene arose from the T18-YncD/CotE-T25 combination (600 Mu). Some signals were also obtained for the combinations T18-YncD/T25-CotE, T25-YncD/CotE-T18, and T25-YncD/T18-CotE. As described previously [31], we compared these signals with the T18-CotE/CotE-T25 self-interaction used as the positive control (360 Mu in these experiments) [18,32]. The strength of the interaction of YncD and CotE observed by BACTH was almost twice that of CotE self-interaction and the observed blue color of the bacterial colonies harboring the YncD/CotE pair after 48 h of incubation was also more intense. A direct interaction between SpoVID or SpoVM and YncD was not detected, but a weak blue color could be observed in those bacterial colonies harboring combinations of plasmids containing the spoIVA and yncD genes. The highest β-galactosidase signal detected on X-gal plates for this pair was obtained from the YncD-T18/T25-SpoIVA and T18-SpoIVA/YncD-T25 combinations (160 Mu), which was approximately twice the negative control. A YncD/YncD self-interaction was also observed (220 Mu), indicating that the protein can form oligomers (Figure 1).
- Protein contacts of YheD and YhaX: Although the deposition of these two envelope proteins on the forespore surface has been shown to be dependent on SpoIVA [20], our bacterial two hybrid assays did not detect any direct binding to SpoIVA or to any other morphogenetic protein, only an YheD self-interaction could be observed. The positive signal was one of the strongest in this screening (1724 Mu) and arose from two plasmid combinations (T25–YheD/YheD–T18 and T25–YheD/T18–YheD). YhaX also formed homooligomers: β-galactosidase reporter gene activity was measured after complementation of the hybrid proteins T25–YhaX/YhaX–T18 and T25-YhaX/T18–YhaX (704 Mu) (Figure 1).
- Bacterial two hybrid assay of interactions of SpoVB, SpoVD and SpoVE with coat morphogenetic proteins: BACTH was previously used to successfully investigate interactions between protein involved in cell wall synthesis [33], many of which are integral membrane proteins or are associated with a membrane. Here we investigated the possible contacts between proteins essential for cortex peptidoglycan synthesis. An analysis of the topology of these proteins predicted that SpoVE and SpoVB have 10–15 transmembrane segments while SpoVD has one transmembrane segment at its N-terminus. Despite some difficulties with cloning, especially of SpoVE and SpoVD which may be toxic to E. coli cells, we managed to prepare the correct plasmid constructs. First, we tested their self-association. No homodimerization of SpoVB was observed, but positive signals were obtained for SpoVE and SpoVD; in both cases, β-galactosidase expression occurred in only one combination of plasmids. For SpoVE, we saw that bacterial colonies turned blue when the SpoVE–T18/T25–SpoVE hybrid proteins were co-expressed and we measured a β-galactosidase activity of up to 360 Mu (Figure 1). For SpoVD, it was important that, after fusion with the adenylate cyclase fragment, the protein be properly incorporated into the membrane such that the T18/T25 domain would be in the cytoplasm (on its N-terminus). Under these restrictions, we detected a positive signal from the combination T18–SpoVD/T25–SpoVD whose β-galactosidase activity reached 240 Mu (Figure 1). We next examined the interactions of these proteins with the coat morphogenetic proteins. Our experiments showed that SpoVD interacts with SpoVM when the hybrid protein T25–SpoVD was combined with T18–SpoVM; very faint blue bacterial colonies were also observed when T25–SpoVD was co-expressed with SpoVM–T18. Quantitative evaluation of the contact strength showed that the interaction of SpoVD with SpoVM was at roughly the same level as the CotE self-interaction (420 Mu vs. 360 Mu), which makes it an intermediate-strength interaction. Screening the interactions of SpoVE with the coat morphogenetic proteins indicated that there may also be an interaction of SpoVE and SpoVM, although the positive signals were very weak and could be identified only after prolonged incubation of the X-gal plate at 4 °C. The signals could be detected only for the T25–SpoVE and SpoVM–T18 and T18–SpoVM combinations (the β-galactosidase activity was approximately twice the negative control). The BACTH system did not detect any contact between these proteins and SpoIVA or between SpoVB and SpoVM or SpoIVA (Figure 1).
3.2. Examination of the YncD–CotE and YncD–SpoIVA Interactions Using a Pull-Down Assay
3.3. Characterization of the ΔyncD Mutant Spores
3.4. Localization of SpoVD-mCherry is Dependent on SpoVM
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Strain | Lysozyme | H2O2 | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Spore count (CFU/mL) | Survival (%) | Spore Count (CFU/mL) | Survival (%) | |||
− | + | − | + | |||
PY79 | 1.1 × 108 | 2.6 × 107 | 24 | 4.2 × 107 | 1.5 × 107 | 36 |
ΔyncD | 6.6 × 107 | 1.3 × 107 | 20 | 7.8 × 107 | 1.3 × 107 | 17 |
Strain | Temperature | Prep 1 | Prep 2 | Prep 3 | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
D-Value (min) | R2 | D-Value (min) | R2 | D-Value (min) | R2 | ||
PY79 | 100 °C | 5.4 | 0.96 | 5.6 | 0.90 | 12.9 | 0.87 |
110 °C | 1.2 | 0.87 | 0.4 | 0.81 | 0.4 | 0.78 | |
ΔyncD | 100 °C | 2.9 | 0.94 | 2.5 | 0.90 | 4.2 | 0.94 |
110 °C | 0.6 | 0.97 | 0.6 | 0.93 | 0.5 | 0.80 |
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Krajčíková, D.; Bugárová, V.; Barák, I. Interactions of Bacillus subtilis Basement Spore Coat Layer Proteins. Microorganisms 2021, 9, 285. https://doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms9020285
Krajčíková D, Bugárová V, Barák I. Interactions of Bacillus subtilis Basement Spore Coat Layer Proteins. Microorganisms. 2021; 9(2):285. https://doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms9020285
Chicago/Turabian StyleKrajčíková, Daniela, Veronika Bugárová, and Imrich Barák. 2021. "Interactions of Bacillus subtilis Basement Spore Coat Layer Proteins" Microorganisms 9, no. 2: 285. https://doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms9020285
APA StyleKrajčíková, D., Bugárová, V., & Barák, I. (2021). Interactions of Bacillus subtilis Basement Spore Coat Layer Proteins. Microorganisms, 9(2), 285. https://doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms9020285