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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, July 2008, p. 4101-4110, Vol. 74, No. 13
0099-2240/08/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AEM.00061-08
Copyright © 2008, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.

Department of Biomedical Sciences, Oregon State University, Corvallis, Oregon 97331
Received 8 January 2008/ Accepted 26 April 2008
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The genus Vibrio is the largest member of the family Vibrionaceae, which includes gram-negative and curved rod-shaped facultative anaerobes. The genus consists of at least 30 known species, which are widespread in the aquatic environment throughout the world. Vibrio species have a wide range of hosts, from humans to aquatic animals, including fish and shellfish. In shellfish diseases, larval and juvenile stages are particularly susceptible to bacterial infections (12, 35). The mortality caused by vibriosis at these early stages may occur suddenly and often results in severe losses of production in shellfish hatcheries (10, 11, 39, 40).
Marine Vibrio species are known to produce extracellular products, some of which are known pathogenicity factors. These toxic proteins include cytolysins, proteases, lipases, siderophores, exopolysaccharides, and effectors delivered via type III secretion systems (7, 38, 44, 46, 53, 54). In V. tubiashii, several secreted proteins, including a low-molecular-weight ciliostatic toxin, are suspected virulence factors in shellfish larval vibriosis (37). The east coast V. tubiashii strain ATCC 19105 has been described to produce a cytolysin/hemolysin (20) and an extracellular protease (9). Kothary et al. (20) showed that the hemolytic activity in culture supernatants could be detected with a variety of blood cells, including sheep erythrocytes. They further found that the N-terminal region (17 amino acids) shared significant similarity to VvhA, a hemolysin produced by Vibrio vulnificus that is known to function as a primary virulence factor (24). An extracellular protease of V. tubiashii was purified from ATCC 19105 (9) and was shown to be a zinc-containing metalloprotease, with the 20-amino-acid sequence of the N-terminal region being almost identical to those of other marine Vibrio metalloproteases. Although these previous studies showed that V. tubiashii is capable of producing several potential toxins, it is still unclear which role these potential pathogenicity factors play in V. tubiashii pathogenicity, if any. In this study, we have focused on the roles of an extracellular protease and a hemolysin in the toxicity of culture supernatants of V. tubiashii on Pacific oyster larvae.
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M15 [F9 lacZ
M15 laclq traD36 proA1 proB1]
dapA::erm [Ermr] pir::RP4 [kan {Kmr} from SM10]), which is auxotrophic for diaminopimelic acid (DAP) (8), was cultured in the presence of 1 mM DAP.
Larval-toxicity assay.
V. tubiashii strains cultured until the early stationary phase (optical density at 600 [OD600],
3.0) were centrifuged, and the supernatants were filter sterilized through a 0.22-µm polyethersulfone sterile filter. Ten-day-old oyster larvae (Coast Seafoods Company) in sterile seawater were aliquoted in a 96-well flat-bottomed plate (Nunc, Rochester, NY) at a density of approximately 20 larvae in 100 µl per well. Toxicity to larvae was assessed by adding various amounts of supernatants (0.5 to 2 µl) to the wells in triplicate, with various incubation times, to determine the threshold for toxicity. The same amount of growth medium was used as a control. Toxicity to larvae was determined by visualization with an inverted microscope. We considered oyster larvae dead when the larvae stopped moving, the velum was grossly damaged, and the larvae appeared to be darkened, similar to phenotypes described by Garland et al. (16). Concentrations of protease inhibitors were as follows: EDTA, 10 mM; 1,10-phenanthroline (PTL), 10 mM; tetraethylenepentamine (TEP), 10 mM; pepstatin A (PPA), 1 mM; phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride (PMSF), 10 mM; and E-64, 1 mM. The concentration of the hemolysin inhibitor cholesterol was 50 ng/ml.
Enzyme assays.
V. tubiashii supernatants were assayed for proteolytic and hemolytic activity as previously described by Halpern et al. (18) and Chan and Foster (4), respectively. Proteolytic activity of the sterile filtered V. tubiashii supernatants was assessed by using azocasein. Briefly, 100 µl of supernatant was incubated with 400 µl of 1% azocasein for 30 min at 37°C. The reaction was stopped by the addition of 600 µl of 10% trichloroacetic acid and incubated on ice for 30 min before being centrifuged at about 16,000 x g for 5 min. Eight hundred microliters of supernatant from the centrifuged reaction was added to 200 µl of 1.8 N sodium hydroxide, and the absorbance at 420 nm was measured in a Bio-Rad SmartSpec Plus spectrophotometer. Hemolytic activity was determined by incubating 50 µl of 3.5% sheep blood (Colorado Serum Co.) in phosphate-buffered saline with 450 µl of either undiluted supernatant or a 10-fold dilution at 30°C for 1 hour. The reaction mixtures were centrifuged at 4,000 rpm for 10 min, and the absorbances at 405 nm were measured.
Zymography analyses.
Proteolytic activity was also assessed using zymogram gel electrophoresis. V. tubiashii filtered supernatants were resolved in 10% gelatin zymogram gels (Bio-Rad Laboratories) for 2 hours at 90 V. Gels were incubated in zymogram renaturing buffer (Bio-Rad) for 1 hour, followed by incubation in zymogram development buffer (Bio-Rad) for an additional hour. Gels were stained with Coomassie brilliant blue for 24 h at 37°C and visualized using a BioDocIt imaging station.
V. tubiashii genes.
All PCR and cloning reactions were conducted using standard procedures (1). Sequences for the vtpA (GenBank accession no. 1087431) and vthAB (GenBank accession no. 1087428) open reading frames (ORFs) were obtained by PCR, using genomic DNA of V. tubiashii strain RE22 with primer pairs designed based on homologous genes from various Vibrio species. Several primer pairs per gene were designed, and PCRs with all primer pair combinations were performed under low-stringency conditions to find a pair that successfully amplified a segment of the V. tubiashii genome (Table 1). These PCR products were then cloned into pCR2.1-TOPO by use of a TOPO TA cloning kit (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA). Resulting clones were sequenced at the Oregon State University Center for Genome Research and Biocomputing core lab facility, using M13 forward and reverse primers. Sequences were verified by BLAST searches. To obtain the entire ORFs for these genes, inverse PCR was performed as previously described (42), using primers designed from the V. tubiashii sequences. In brief, genomic DNA of V. tubiashii was digested in 12 reactions with the following restriction enzymes: BamHI, BanII, PstI, EcoRV, SalI, BglII, XhoI, SacI, EcoRI, SmaI, SpeI, and PvuII. Following digestion and subsequent enzyme inactivation, intramolecular ligation reactions were performed with T4 DNA ligase (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA) at 16°C overnight. The ligation reaction product was used as the template for inverse PCR, using the primers shown in Table 1. Products obtained from inverse PCR were TA cloned into pCR 2.1-TOPO (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA) and sequenced using the M13 forward and reverse primers. The Oregon State University Center for Genomic Research and Biocomputing website was used for bioinformatic tools (http://bioinfo.cgrb.oregonstate.edu/).
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TABLE 1. Primers used in this study
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V. tubiashii mutants.
A vtpA V. tubiashii mutant was constructed by insertional mutagenesis. Briefly, a 773-bp internal DNA fragment of the gene located 627 bases from the start and 424 bases from the stop was amplified by PCR (Table 1) and cloned into the vector pWM91 (29). Since V. tubiashii strain RE22 is naturally ampicillin resistant, a kanamycin resistance cassette was also cloned into this vector. The resulting construct was transformed into chemically competent E. coli β2155 cells. Transformed cells were selected on LB agar with kanamycin and DAP and were subsequently conjugated with V. tubiashii RE22 on LB-1% NaCl agar plus DAP and incubated at 30°C overnight. Conjugates were harvested by suspending the biomass from the plate in LB-1% NaCl broth and were then plated on LB-1% NaCl agar supplemented with kanamycin but without DAP and incubated at 30°C.
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FIG. 1. Proteolytic and hemolytic analyses of bacterial culture supernatants. Quantitative data are shown for proteolytic (A) and hemolytic (B) activities of culture supernatants of V. tubiashii pathogenic strains RE22 and RE98 and the nonpathogenic bacterial isolate RE15. (C) Zymography analysis of these supernatants. Bacteria were grown in LB medium supplemented with 1% NaCl at 25°C and were harvested at an OD600 of approximately 3.0. Proteolytic and hemolytic activities were determined using azocasein and sheep blood, respectively, as described in Materials and Methods. The error bars indicate standard deviations (n = 3). Data for proteolytic and hemolytic activities were evaluated by Student's t test (*, P < 0.01 compared with RE15). Bands of proteolytic activity in the zymogram gel are shown as clear protein bands in a dark background. The molecular masses (kDa) on the left indicate the positions of molecular size markers.
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1.8), with the production reaching the highest level during the late log phase and then declining shortly after the mid-stationary phase. In contrast, protease production was gradually increased during the late log phase (OD600,
3.2), and the proteolytic activity was the highest at the mid-stationary phase (Fig. 2A). Thus, while V. tubiashii hemolysin is highly produced until early stationary phase, protease production reached its highest levels at the late stationary phase.
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FIG. 2. Relationship between growth and proteolytic (A) and hemolytic (B) activities of culture supernatants of V. tubiashii strain RE22. Bacteria were grown in LB medium supplemented with 1% NaCl at 25°C, and samples were harvested at different times during bacterial growth. The error bars indicate standard deviations (n = 3).
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FIG. 3. Effects of protease and hemolysin inhibitors on proteolytic and hemolytic activities and on toxicity to Pacific oyster larvae. Enzymatic activities and toxicity levels are shown as percentages of those for nontreated samples. For the toxicity assay, filter-sterilized supernatants were added to a final concentration of 1%. The error bars indicate standard deviations (n = 3). Data for proteolytic and hemolytic activities were evaluated by Student's t test (*, P < 0.01 compared with the nontreated control). Data for larval mortality were evaluated by chi-square test (*, P < 0.05 compared with nontreated control). NT, nontreated; TEP, tetraethylene pentamine; OPA, 1,10-phenanthroline; PMSF, phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride; PPA, pepstatin A; CHOL, cholesterol.
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FIG. 4. Alignment of deduced V. tubiashii metalloprotease amino acid sequence with those of various bacterial species. Numbers on the right refer to the positions of the amino acid residues. The black bar indicates the previously identified region by Delston et al. (9). Arrows indicate critical residues for zinc binding. Black shaded areas indicate identical amino acids in all strains, and gray shaded areas indicate identical or similar amino acids in eight or more strains at any position. The following sequences were aligned using ClustalW: zinc metalloproteases of Vibrio sp. strain MED222 (GenBank accession no. NZ_AAND01000005), V. splendidus strain 12B01 (accession no. ZP_00990032), V. proteolyticus (accession no. AAA27548), Vibrionales bacterium strain SWAT-3 (ZP_01816166), Vibrio (Listonella) anguillarum strain M93Sm (accession no. AAR88093), Vibrio vulnificus strain YJ016 (accession no. NP_937521), V. cholerae strain 623-39 (accession no. ZP_01980763), V. aestuarianus strain 01/32 (accession no. AAU04777), V. angustum strain S14 (accession no. ZP_01236251), Photobacterium sp. strain SKA34 (accession no. ZP_01158654), and V. fluvialis strain AQ0005 (accession no. BAB86344).
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FIG. 5. Alignments of deduced amino acid sequences of VthA and VthB with V. vulnificus VvhA and VvhB. (A) Genetic organization of the vthA and vthB genes in V. tubiashii strain RE22. ClustalW alignments were done with VthB (B) and VthA (C) and their V. vulnificus homologs (GenBank accession no. AB124803). The black bar indicates the region previously identified by Kothary et al. (20).
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FIG. 6. Analyses of supernatants from a VtpA-deficient mutant of V. tubiashii strain RE22. Protease (A) and hemolysin (B) production, as well as toxicity to oyster larvae (C), was compared to that of the wild-type strain. Although the mutant strain, but not the wild-type strain, was grown in the presence of 50 µg/ml kanamycin, all cells were harvested at an OD600 of approximately 3.0. For the toxicity assay, filter-sterilized supernatants were added to a final concentration of 0.5%. The error bars indicate standard deviations (n = 3). Data for proteolytic and hemolytic activities were evaluated by Student's t test (*, P < 0.01 compared with the wild type). Data for larval mortality were evaluated by chi-square test (*, P < 0.05 compared with the wild type).
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FIG. 7. Expression of vtpA and vthA in V. cholerae. Protease (A) and hemolysin (B) production, as well as toxicity to oyster larvae (C), was analyzed for V. cholerae strains O395N1 and 638 carrying the empty vector (pBAD-TOPO) or the V. tubiashii metalloprotease (pBAD-vtpA) or hemolysin (pBAD-vthA) gene. For the toxicity assay, filter-sterilized supernatants were added to a final concentration of 1%. The error bars indicate standard deviations (n = 3). Data for proteolytic and hemolytic activities were evaluated by Student's t test (*, P < 0.01 compared with the empty vector). Data for larval mortality were evaluated by the chi-square test (*, P < 0.05 compared with the empty vector).
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Although neither protease nor hemolysin is produced at a low cell density, hemolytic activity increased early during growth and decreased when the culture reached the stationary phase. In contrast, protease production increased steadily during growth and reached the highest level at stationary phase. These results indicate that expression of these proteins responds to the cell density of the culture. It has been documented that production of exoprotease and hemolysin is regulated by quorum sensing in V. vulnificus, as well as many other Vibrio species (19, 30, 43), in which the metalloprotease gene is activated at high cell population densities, whereas the hemolysin gene is negatively regulated under these conditions. Our data show a steep decrease in hemolysin production after the mid-stationary phase and a gradual increase in production of extracellular protease at the early stationary phase, suggesting that V. tubiashii may take advantage of a quorum-sensing system similar to that of V. vulnificus.
Hemolysin production by V. tubiashii ATCC 19105 has been described previously (20), and the authors identified the first 17 amino acid residues of the purified protein. They revealed that 12 of the 17 residues are identical to those of the V. vulnificus hemolysin, VvhA. Here we report the nucleotide sequences of the hemolysin genes (vthA) from two V. tubiashii strains. Our study revealed that the N-terminal region of the ATCC 19105 hemolysin was identical to that of VthA produced by V. tubiashii strains RE22 and RE98. Our amino acid sequence analysis of the entire gene product further clarified that VthA indeed shares significant homology with VvhA. In V. vulnificus, vvhA and the smaller upstream gene vvhB are clustered as an operon, yet the function of vvhB is unknown to date (6). We found a putative homolog of vvhB (vthB) upstream of vthA, indicating that V. tubiashii produces a similar hemolysin to that of V. vulnificus. The functional role of the vthB gene in V. tubiashii is currently under investigation.
A previous study with the extracellular protease of V. tubiashii ATCC 19105 demonstrated that 20 residues of the N-terminal sequence of secreted and processed metalloprotease are similar to those in other varieties of Vibrio species (9). In this study, we isolated the gene (vtpA) encoding a zinc metalloprotease from two pathogenic V. tubiashii strains. Our data showed that the 20 residues of the metalloprotease purified from strain ATCC 19105 are identical to those of VtpA. Sequence alignment of VtpA with several proteases produced by different Vibrio species showed high sequence similarity to these zinc metalloproteases. In addition, Delston et al. (9) reported that the proteolytic activity of the purified protease from ATCC 19105 was impaired by the zinc metalloprotease-specific inhibitor Zincov. Our results showed that metalloprotease inhibitors such as EDTA, TEP, and PTL dramatically reduced proteolytic activity in culture supernatants of V. tubiashii. Taken together, the results show that it is very likely that VtpA functions as a zinc metalloprotease.
Here we examined the roles of the V. tubiashii extracellular hemolysin and protease in toxicity of culture supernatants to Pacific oyster larvae. We concluded that the metalloprotease VtpA, but not the hemolysin VthA, acts as one of the critical factors for the toxicity of V. tubiashii supernatants on Pacific oyster larvae, based on the following evidence: (i) treatment of V. tubiashii culture supernatants with metalloprotease inhibitors severely diminished the toxicity to Pacific oyster larvae, whereas other classes of protease inhibitors or a specific inhibitor of hemolysin did not affect the lethality; (ii) strains of V. cholerae expressing the vtpA gene, but not vthA or the vector plasmid, caused high larval mortality; and (iii) a VtpA-negative mutant strain of V. tubiashii showed a significant loss of toxicity to the oyster larvae.
Extracellular metalloproteases produced by marine Vibrio spp. have been well documented as pathogenicity factors in several cases. For example, the zinc metalloprotease is involved in the invasive mechanism of the fish pathogen V. anguillarum (33). In V. splendidus, the metalloprotease is essential for toxicity when the extracellular products are injected into oysters (25). Moreover, it has been reported that V. aestuarianus zinc metalloprotease, which shares homology with that of V. cholerae, is responsible for virulence against the oyster Crassostrea gigas (50). A subsequent study by Labreuche et al. (21) supported the observation that total protease levels in V. aestuarianus-injected oysters are well correlated with a decrease in phagocytic activities by the host, suggesting that a variety of marine Vibrio species take advantage of similar proteases to cause disease in oysters and humans.
With VtpA described as a critical factor in V. tubiashii toxicity, the functional role of VtpA as a pathogenicity factor has yet to be characterized. Previous studies reported that toxicity of culture supernatants of V. proteolyticus to bivalve larvae of the native oyster (Ostrea edulis) was due to an extracellular protease, since the enzyme rapidly broke down gill tissues of blue mussels (Mytilus edulis) (35, 36). A subsequent study by the same group revealed that production of the protease was maximal during the late exponential phase of growth, and the exoprotease was inhibited by EDTA but not by pepstatin A or PMSF (34). Although it is still uncertain how VtpA in V. tubiashii is involved in the bacillary necrosis disease mechanism, these previous findings and our present data suggest that VtpA contributes to pathogenicity by degrading tissues. Interestingly, Takahashi et al. (48) found that treatment of V. tubiashii strain ATCC 19106 with ovoglobulin, a protein derived from hen egg whites which also acts as a strong metalloprotease inhibitor, significantly lowered the mortality rate of Pacific oyster larvae, suggesting that the extracellular metalloprotease is critical for the toxicity of the strain. They further demonstrated that the addition of ovoglobulins suppressed the growth of ATCC 19106 in gelatin-seawater broth, which indicates that the extracellular protease is required for bacterial growth under these conditions. Therefore, VtpA may contribute to the destruction of the host tissues, which may in turn provide the bacteria with nutrients under poor growth conditions.
There are three other classes of proteases based on catalytic mechanisms (serine, cysteine, and aspartic proteases), some of which have been reported as important pathogenicity factors in marine Vibrio species. For instance, for Vibrio harveyi, a cysteine protease acts as a major exotoxin in the tiger prawn (26), while for Vibrio alginolyticus, a serine protease is reported to be the dominant protease secreted as well as a major pathogenicity factor in the tiger prawn (5). In this study, however, only metalloprotease inhibitors severely impaired the toxicity of culture supernatants to Pacific oyster larvae. Interestingly, culture supernatants of a VtpA-deficient mutant of V. tubiashii strain RE22 still produced approximately 30% proteolytic activity compared to that of the wild type, indicating the presence of several other proteases produced by V. tubiashii. The facts that multiple proteolytic bands were observed in our zymography assay and that a putative second extracellular metalloprotease gene is present in the Pacific oyster pathogen V. splendidus strain LPG32 (GenBank accession no. ZP_00989149.1) suggest that there might be a redundant vtpA homolog in addition to other types of protease genes in V. tubiashii. Similarly, the metalloprotease-deficient mutant of LPG32 also produced approximately 20% of the proteolytic activity of the wild-type parent (25). An intriguing future study might attempt to define the roles of these other putative proteases in the toxicity of V. tubiashii culture supernatants to oyster larvae.
Although we have shown that the metalloprotease, not hemolysin, is the major pathogenicity factor in supernatants of V. tubiashii, we should acknowledge that hemolysin as well as some of the other secreted proteins may contribute to the overall pathogenicity of V. tubiashii. Nottage and Birbeck (37) described a heat-stable ciliostatic toxin, a lethal exotoxin produced by V. tubiashii and V. alginolyticus, which degrades gill segments of blue mussels. It has also been described that a heat-stable toxin produced by Vibrio pectenicida is toxic to king scallop hemocytes (22). Moreover, the presence of a type III secretion system has been reported for V. tubiashii (38), suggesting that the bacterium produces host-interacting effector proteins. Therefore, further studies are essential to fully understand the disease mechanisms of shellfish larval vibriosis.
In summary, we have focused on identifying the critical pathogenicity factors produced in supernatants of V. tubiashii. Our data revealed that pathogenic strains of V. tubiashii produced both extracellular protease and hemolysin in vitro, while a nonpathogenic isolate did not produce any detectable levels of extracellular protease. Sequence analyses of genes encoding these proteins revealed that the protease belongs to a family of zinc metalloproteases which is widespread among Vibrio species, whereas the hemolysin shared significant homology only with the hemolysin/cytolysin of V. vulnificus. Moreover, we have concluded that the metalloprotease (VtpA) acts as one of the critical virulence factors for the pathogenicity of V. tubiashii to Pacific oyster larvae.
This work was supported in part by a USDA-SBIR grant and NIH grant AI-063121-02.
Published ahead of print on 2 May 2008. ![]()
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