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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, January 2003, p. 663-667, Vol. 69, No. 1
0099-2240/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AEM.69.1.663-667.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
A Colonization Factor (Production of Lateral Flagella) of Mesophilic Aeromonas spp. Is Inactive in Aeromonas salmonicida Strains
Susana Merino,1 Rosalina Gavín,1 Silvia Vilches,1 Jonathan G. Shaw,2 and Juan M. Tomás1*
Departamento Microbiología, Facultad Biología, Universidad Barcelona, 08071 Barcelona, Spain,1
Division of Molecular and Genetic Medicine, University of Sheffield Medical School, Sheffield S10 2RX, United Kingdom2
Received 23 July 2002/
Accepted 21 October 2002

ABSTRACT
The nine
laf (lateral flagellum) genes of mesophilic aeromonads
are in the
Aeromonas salmonicida genome. The
laf genes are functional,
except for
lafA (flagellin gene), which was inactivated by transposase
8 (IS
3 family). A pathogenic characteristic of mesophilic aeromonads
(lateral flagella) is abolished in this specialized pathogen
with a narrow host range.

INTRODUCTION
Aeromonas salmonicida is an important pathogen of salmonid fish,
producing the systemic disease furunculosis (
12). As in
Vibrio parahaemolyticus (
8,
9), two types of flagella are responsible
for motility in aeromonads. A polar unsheathed flagellum is
expressed constitutively that allows the bacteria to swim in
liquid environments. In media where the polar flagellum is unable
to propel the cell, aeromonads express peritrichous lateral
flagella (
21), a phenomenon associated with the colonization
of surfaces, as such hyperflagellated cells demonstrate increased
adherence. We have demonstrated the importance of the polar
flagellum of
A.
hydrophila in the invasion of fish cell lines
(
11,
13). More recently, we have described a polar flagellar
gene region in
A.
caviae that appears to be essential for adherence
to human epithelial cells in vitro (
19). Traditionally, the
genus
Aeromonas has been divided on the basis of motility, with
A.
salmonicida being the typical nonmotile species (
17). However,
a report by McIntosh and Austin (
10) indicated that five
A.
salmonicida isolates were able to produce a pole-located sheathed
flagellum when grown at supraoptimal incubation temperatures
(30 to 37°C) and in the presence of 18% (wt/vol) Ficoll.
However, incubation under these conditions never renders more
than 1% of the population motile (twisting/tumbling movement)
or flagellated. Genetic evidence demonstrated that
A.
salmonicida strains are capable of producing flagella, as two flagellin
genes (
flA and -
B) were identified and characterized (
24). Nine
lateral flagellar genes,
lafA to
-U, for
A.
hydrophila and four
A.
caviae genes,
lafA1,
lafA2,
lafB, and
fliU, have been isolated
(
3). Mutant characterization and nucleotide and N-terminal sequencing
demonstrated that the
A.
hydrophila and
A.
caviae lateral flagellins
are almost identical but are distinct from their polar flagellum
counterparts. Mutation of
Aeromonas lafB or
lafS or both
A.
caviae lateral flagellin genes caused the loss of lateral flagella
and a reduction in adherence and biofilm formation. Mutation
of
lafA1,
lafA2,
fliU, or
lafT resulted in strains that expressed
lateral flagella but had reduced adherence levels. Mutation
of the lateral flagellar loci did not affect polar flagellum
synthesis, but the polarity of the transposon insertions on
the
A.
hydrophila lafT and -
U genes resulted in nonmotility
(
3). In a recent study of lateral flagella and swarming motility
in different
Aeromonas species, four different isolates of
A.
salmonicida reacted positively with a DNA probe for lateral
flagella that was used to correlate lateral flagella and swarming
motility in mesophilic
Aeromonas spp. (
7).
In this study, we provide the genetic basis to explain why A. salmonicida strains are able to hybridize with a DNA laf gene probe but are unable to produce lateral flagella.

Presence of laf genes and lateral flagella.
The nucleotide sequences of the lateral flagellins from
A.
hydrophila AH-3 (
lafA) and
A.
caviae Sch3N (
lafA1 and
lafA2) were aligned
by using ClustalW (
22) in order to find common oligonucleotides
able to amplify this DNA region. In the same alignment, the
polar flagellins of
A.
caviae Sch3N (
flaA and
flaB) and
A.
salmonicida (
flaA and
flaB) were introduced in order to verify that the
common oligonucleotides for lateral flagellins are unable to
amplify the polar flagellins. From these data, we found two
highly conserved domains (the C- and N-terminal domains) in
which oligonucleotides could be designed to specifically amplify
the lateral flagellins. The oligonucleotides designed were Laf1
(5'-GGTC TGCGCATCCAACTC-3') and Laf2 (5'-GCTCCAGACGGTTGATG-3').
In a PCR with Laf1, Laf2, and genomic DNA from either
A.
hydrophila AH-3 or
A.
caviae Sch3N, we obtained a single band of approximately
550 bp that was confirmed to be the lateral flagellin gene by
DNA sequencing (Fig.
1A).
Table
1 lists the strains used in this study.
A.
salmonicida strains were grown at 20°C, and mesophilic
Aeromonas strains
were grown at 30°C. The
A.
salmonicida strains were pathogenic
isolates from moribund fish derived from a wide range of geographical
locations (Canada, Japan, the United Kingdom, the United States,
and Spain). All of the
A.
salmonicida strains used in this study
were classified in accordance with
Bergey's Manual of Systematic Bacteriology. All of the isolates were able to react with specific
antibodies against the A layer and could be classified as typical
pathogenic
A.
salmonicida strains (
16).
All 50 (100%) of the
A.
salmonicida strains showed a positive
PCR resulting in a single band of approximately 550 bp, which
was confirmed by sequencing in a number of cases (Fig.
1A).
The strains were also tested by colony blot hybridization against
a
laf probe and for swarming by methods previously described
(
3,
19). There was a complete correlation among the PCR-positive
and colony blot-positive strains. However, while
laf-positive
mesophilic
Aeromonas sp. strains were able to swarm, none of
the
A.
salmonicida strains tested were able to. Furthermore,
when several
A.
salmonicida strains were examined by electron
microscopy (EM) and a Western immunoblot assay for the presence
of lateral flagella and production of lateral flagellin (
3,
19), they were always negative.
As can be observed from the DNA sequences of A. hydrophila AH-3 (accession no. AY028400) and A. caviae Sch3N (accession no. AF348135), lafB is the highly conserved gene immediately downstream of the lateral flagellin gene(s) in the laf cluster. An oligonucleotide was designed within the lafB gene, Laf5 (5'-ATCGCTGGAGGTCATCTTG-3'). In a PCR with Laf1, Laf5, and genomic DNA from A. hydrophila AH-3 or A. caviae Sch3N, we obtained a single band (1,715 bp) for A. hydrophila AH-3 and two bands (2,751 and 1,737 bp) for A. caviae Sch3N (depending upon whether they have one or two flagellin genes). When we tested the A. salmonicida strains, we amplified a single band of 2,952 bp (Fig. 1B). The complete DNA sequence of the A. salmonicida band showed the presence of a putative transposase 8 from the IS3 family inserted within the A. salmonicida lafA gene. When other A. salmonicida strains were tested (n = 10) with the same oligonucleotides, the same lafA band (2,952 bp) containing the putative transposase was amplified. This putative transposase showed a high degree of identity and similarity (more than 60 and 75%, respectively) to TnpA from Pseudomonas putida or Erwinia carotovora and putative transposases from Pantoea agglomerans, Xanthomonas campestris, and Agrobacterium tumefaciens. Furthermore, it showed the typical transposase region at the beginning of the sequence and the integrase core domain at the end.

The complete A. salmonicida strain A450 laf gene cluster.
With either genomic DNA from
A.
hydrophila AH-3 or the cosmid
pCOS-LAF (
3) in a PCR (annealing temperature of 56°C, extension
time of 7 min 30 s, and PlatinumTaq polymerase high fidelity
from Invitrogen) with oligonucleotides Laf1 and Laf9 (5'-CCAGATTCTTTTCCGCCTG-3'),
a single DNA band of 7,120 bp was obtained (Fig.
1C). Oligonucleotide
Laf9 is located in the last gene of the
laf cluster,
lafU; this
allowed complete amplification of the nine
laf genes. By applying
the same amplification procedure to
A.
caviae Sch3N or
A.
veronii bv.
sobria AH-1 genomic DNA, we obtained a single DNA band with
a size similar to that of the AH-3 band. Sequence analysis of
both edges confirmed the presence of the
lafA and
lafU genes
in these strains. However, when
A.
salmonicida strain A450 was
tested, we obtained a single band of 8,360 bp (Fig.
1C). Sequencing
of the complete DNA band amplified from
A.
salmonicida strain
A450 (accession no.
AY1295578) revealed nine open reading frames
(ORFs):
lafA, -
B, -
C, -
X, -
E, -
F, -
S, -
T, and -
U (Fig.
2). All
of the ORFs were transcribed in the same direction, and putative
Shine-Dalgarno sequences were found upstream of all of the ORF
start codons. The only putative transcriptional terminator sequence
was found between
lafA and
lafB, suggesting that
lafB- to
U form a single transcriptional unit. The coding sequence was
preceded by a putative
54 promoter sequence. From
lafB to
lafU,
the DNA sequence homology with the same region of
A.
hydrophila AH-3 was always greater than 90% (
3).

Complementation analysis of mesophilic Aeromonas Laf- mutants with A. salmonicida laf genes.
The AH-1982 (
lafB) and AH-1983 (
lafS) mutant strains of
A.
hydrophila and mutant strain AAR9 (
lafB) or tandem flagellin mutant strain
AAR6 (
lafA1 lafA2) of
A.
caviae produced polar flagella but
not lateral flagella (
3). Mutant AH-1984 (
lafT) of
A.
hydrophila produced polar and lateral flagella but was nonmotile (
3). Mutant
AAR6 was unable to be complemented by plasmid pINA1 (
lafA of
A.
salmonicida with the putative transposase inserted), as lateral
flagella were not detected by EM.
However, mutants AAR9 and AH-1982 were fully complemented when plasmid pINA2 (lafB of A. salmonicida) was introduced into them, as lateral flagella were detected on the complemented strains by EM. A similar situation was observed for mutant AH-1983 and plasmid pINA3 (lafS of A. salmonicida). Furthermore, plasmid pINA4 (lafT of A. salmonicida) was fully able to complement the nonmotile phenotype when introduced into mutant AH-1984. None of these strains were complemented when we introduced the plasmid vector alone (pACYC184) into the mutants.
Lateral flagella, as well as the polar flagellum, in mesophilic Aeromonas strains seem to be involved in bacterial adhesion to eukaryotic cells and the ability to form biofilms (3, 5, 19). In order to see if the A. salmonicida laf genes were fully functional, we tested them for the ability to complement the mesophilic Aeromonas laf mutants for adhesion to HEp-2 cells and biofilm formation in vitro by using previously described assays (18, 23). As shown in Table 2, A. hydrophila mutants AH-1982 (lafB) and AH-1983 (lafS) and A. caviae mutants AAR6 (lafA1 lafA2) and AAR9 (lafB) showed an approximately 85% reduction in adherence to HEp-2 cells in comparison with the respective wild-type strains whereas mutant AH-1984 showed only a 50% reduction (P = <0.0005). Furthermore, the same mutants showed a drastic reduction in the ability to form biofilms (Table 2). The results obtained with the complemented strains (Table 2) are in agreement with the phenotypic complementation mentioned above. Briefly, lafB, -S, and -T mutants recovered values of adhesion to HEp-2 cells and biofilm formation similar to those of the corresponding wild-type strains. However, again, the AAR6 mutant of A. caviae (lafA1 lafA2) was not complemented by plasmid pINA1 (lafA of A. salmonicida with the putative transposase inserted). Again, no changes in adhesion to HEp-2 cells or biofilm formation were found in the mutants when the plasmid vector alone (pACYC184) was introduced.
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TABLE 2. Adhesion to HEp-2 cells and biofilm formation of different mesophilic Aeromonas wild-type and mutant strainsa
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We clearly demonstrated by mutant complementation of mesophilic
Aeromonas spp. that
A.
salmonicida genes
lafB to -
U are fully
functional either by their phenotypic traits (presence or absence
of lateral flagella or swarming motility) or by their ability
to adhere to HEp-2 cells and form biofilms in vitro. The only
A.
salmonicida laf gene that is nonfunctional is
lafA, as assessed
by mutant complementation of mesophilic
Aeromonas spp. It was
shown that in all of the
A.
salmonicida isolates tested, there
was a putative transposase 8 from the IS
3 family inserted in
the middle of the
lafA gene. This gene is responsible for lateral
flagellin production, which in some cases is present as a single
gene, as in
A.
hydrophila AH-3 (
3), or as two genes, as in
A.
caviae Sch3N (
3).
A.
salmonicida appears to have only a single
lafA gene, which was inactivated in all of the strains tested.
We tried repeatedly to introduce plasmid pCOS-LAF (3) into different A. salmonicida strains. Although cosmid vector pLA2917 alone (1) is able to enter and replicate in A. salmonicida strains, no transconjugants were obtained when pCOS-LAF was introduced. Moreover, if a plasmid construct (pACYC184) with the A. hydrophila AH-3 lafA gene alone was introduced into A. salmonicida strains, we obtained the same negative results.
The lack of transconjugants of A. salmonicida strains with pCOS-LAF or a plasmid construct with the A. hydrophila AH-3 lafA gene alone does not allow us to state that A. salmonicida strains just require a intact copy of the lafA gene for production of lateral flagella. Inactivation of lafA was enough to abolish production of lateral flagella in A. salmonicida, but maybe other genes affecting global (polar and lateral) flagellar synthesis are lacking in A. salmonicida strains, thus explaining the lack of production of polar and lateral flagella. For instance, Vibrio parahaemolyticus strains use more than 60 genes to produce polar flagella (8). It is tempting to speculate that supraoptimal incubation temperatures plus high-osmolarity (Ficoll) conditions may enhance excision of the transposase from the A. salmonicida lafA gene, rendering a small percentage of the population able to produce lateral flagella. In this respect, A. salmonicida appear to be similar to Shigella spp., which are also classified as nonmotile, as IS elements have been detected in the flagellar genes of various strains (2). However, flagellate and motile strains of Shigella spp. have been reported, although at a low frequency (4). As with Shigella spp., A. salmonicida does not show any degeneracy in its flagellar genes. This suggests that the insertion of the IS element was a recent event or that keeping these genes and having a small amount the A. salmonicida population able to become motile are somehow important for the survival and biology of the organism.
Production of lateral flagella by mesophilic Aeromonas spp. is a pathogenic factor, as it enhances adhesion to eukaryotic cells and the ability to form biofilms (3). A. salmonicida strains are pathogens with a narrow host range, salmonid fish. In this bacterium, this pathogenic factor is not expressed even though the genes appear to be present in its genome. This is, to our knowledge, the first genetically well-documented case in which a pathogenic character is abolished in a pathogen with a high level of specialization because of its narrow host range.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This work was supported by a Plan Nacional de I + D grant (Ministerio
de Ciencia y Tecnología, Spain) and by Generalitat de
Catalunya. R.G. is the recipient of a predoctoral fellowship
from University of Barcelona.
We thank Maite Polo for technical assistance.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Departamento Microbiología, Facultad Biología, Universidad Barcelona, Diagonal 645, 08071 Barcelona, Spain. Phone: 34-93-4021486. Fax: 34-93-4110592. E-mail:
juant{at}porthos.bio.ub.es.


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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, January 2003, p. 663-667, Vol. 69, No. 1
0099-2240/03/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AEM.69.1.663-667.2003
Copyright © 2003, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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