Phenotypic characterization of OmpX, an Ail homologue of Yersinia pestis KIM

Anna M. Kolodziejek(University of Idaho), Dylan J. Sinclair(University of Idaho), Keun Seok Seo(University of Idaho), Darren R. Schnider(University of Idaho), Claudia F. Deobald(University of Idaho), Harold N. Rohde(University of Idaho), Austin K. Viall(University of Idaho), Scott S. Minnich(University of Idaho), Carolyn J. Hovde(University of Idaho), Scott A. Minnich(University of Idaho), Gregory A. Bohach(University of Idaho)
Microbiology
September 1, 2007
Cited by 110

Abstract

The goal of this study was to characterize the Yersinia pestis KIM OmpX protein. Yersinia spp. provide a model for studying several virulence processes including attachment to, and internalization by, host cells. For Yersinia enterocolitica and Yersinia pseudotuberculosis, Ail, YadA and Inv, have been implicated in these processes. In Y. pestis, YadA and Inv are inactivated. Genomic analysis of two Y. pestis strains revealed four loci with sequence homology to Ail. One of these genes, designated y1324 in the Y. pestis KIM database, encodes a protein designated OmpX. The mature protein has a predicted molecular mass of 17.47 kDa, shares approximately 70 % sequence identity with Y. enterocolitica Ail, and has an identical homologue, designated Ail, in the Y. pestis CO92 database. The present study compared the Y. pestis KIM6(+) parental strain with a mutant derivative having an engineered disruption of the OmpX structural gene. The parental strain (and a merodiploid control strain) expressed OmpX at 28 and 37 degrees C, and the protein was detectable throughout all phases of growth. OmpX was required for efficient adherence to, and internalization by, cultured HEp-2 cell monolayers and conferred resistance to the bactericidal effect of human serum. Deletion of ompX resulted in a significantly reduced autoaggregation phenotype and loss of pellicle formation in vitro. These results suggest that Y. pestis OmpX shares functional homology with Y. enterocolitica Ail in adherence, internalization into epithelial cells and serum resistance.


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