Petrobactin Is Exported from Bacillus anthracis by the RND-Type Exporter ApeX

Bacillus anthracis—a Gram-positive, spore-forming bacterium—causes anthrax, a highly lethal disease with high bacteremia titers. Such rapid growth requires ample access to nutrients, including iron. However, access to this critical metal is heavily restricted in mammals, which requires B. anthracis...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: A. K. Hagan, A. Tripathi, D. Berger, D. H. Sherman, P. C. Hanna, Eric A. Johnson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: American Society for Microbiology 2017-09-01
Series:mBio
Online Access:http://mbio.asm.org/cgi/content/full/8/5/e01238-17
id doaj-73aa08efe8474dcd88a84a538252440e
record_format Article
spelling doaj-73aa08efe8474dcd88a84a538252440e2021-07-02T04:37:13ZengAmerican Society for MicrobiologymBio2150-75112017-09-0185e01238-1710.1128/mBio.01238-17Petrobactin Is Exported from Bacillus anthracis by the RND-Type Exporter ApeXA. K. HaganA. TripathiD. BergerD. H. ShermanP. C. HannaEric A. JohnsonBacillus anthracis—a Gram-positive, spore-forming bacterium—causes anthrax, a highly lethal disease with high bacteremia titers. Such rapid growth requires ample access to nutrients, including iron. However, access to this critical metal is heavily restricted in mammals, which requires B. anthracis to employ petrobactin, an iron-scavenging small molecule known as a siderophore. Petrobactin biosynthesis is mediated by asb gene products, and import of the iron-bound (holo)-siderophore into the bacterium has been well studied. In contrast, little is known about the mechanism of petrobactin export following its production in B. anthracis cells. Using a combination of bioinformatics data, gene deletions, and laser ablation electrospray ionization mass spectrometry (LAESI-MS), we identified a resistance-nodulation-cell division (RND)-type transporter, termed ApeX, as a putative petrobactin exporter. Deletion of apeX abrogated export of intact petrobactin, which accumulated inside the cell. However, growth of ΔapeX mutants in iron-depleted medium was not affected, and virulence in mice was not attenuated. Instead, petrobactin components were determined to be exported through a different protein, which enables iron transport sufficient for growth, albeit with a slightly lower affinity for iron. This is the first report to identify a functional siderophore exporter in B. anthracis and the in vivo functionality of siderophore components. Moreover, this is the first application of LAESI-MS to sample a virulence factor/metabolite directly from bacterial culture media and cell pellets of a human pathogen.http://mbio.asm.org/cgi/content/full/8/5/e01238-17
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author A. K. Hagan
A. Tripathi
D. Berger
D. H. Sherman
P. C. Hanna
Eric A. Johnson
spellingShingle A. K. Hagan
A. Tripathi
D. Berger
D. H. Sherman
P. C. Hanna
Eric A. Johnson
Petrobactin Is Exported from Bacillus anthracis by the RND-Type Exporter ApeX
mBio
author_facet A. K. Hagan
A. Tripathi
D. Berger
D. H. Sherman
P. C. Hanna
Eric A. Johnson
author_sort A. K. Hagan
title Petrobactin Is Exported from Bacillus anthracis by the RND-Type Exporter ApeX
title_short Petrobactin Is Exported from Bacillus anthracis by the RND-Type Exporter ApeX
title_full Petrobactin Is Exported from Bacillus anthracis by the RND-Type Exporter ApeX
title_fullStr Petrobactin Is Exported from Bacillus anthracis by the RND-Type Exporter ApeX
title_full_unstemmed Petrobactin Is Exported from Bacillus anthracis by the RND-Type Exporter ApeX
title_sort petrobactin is exported from bacillus anthracis by the rnd-type exporter apex
publisher American Society for Microbiology
series mBio
issn 2150-7511
publishDate 2017-09-01
description Bacillus anthracis—a Gram-positive, spore-forming bacterium—causes anthrax, a highly lethal disease with high bacteremia titers. Such rapid growth requires ample access to nutrients, including iron. However, access to this critical metal is heavily restricted in mammals, which requires B. anthracis to employ petrobactin, an iron-scavenging small molecule known as a siderophore. Petrobactin biosynthesis is mediated by asb gene products, and import of the iron-bound (holo)-siderophore into the bacterium has been well studied. In contrast, little is known about the mechanism of petrobactin export following its production in B. anthracis cells. Using a combination of bioinformatics data, gene deletions, and laser ablation electrospray ionization mass spectrometry (LAESI-MS), we identified a resistance-nodulation-cell division (RND)-type transporter, termed ApeX, as a putative petrobactin exporter. Deletion of apeX abrogated export of intact petrobactin, which accumulated inside the cell. However, growth of ΔapeX mutants in iron-depleted medium was not affected, and virulence in mice was not attenuated. Instead, petrobactin components were determined to be exported through a different protein, which enables iron transport sufficient for growth, albeit with a slightly lower affinity for iron. This is the first report to identify a functional siderophore exporter in B. anthracis and the in vivo functionality of siderophore components. Moreover, this is the first application of LAESI-MS to sample a virulence factor/metabolite directly from bacterial culture media and cell pellets of a human pathogen.
url http://mbio.asm.org/cgi/content/full/8/5/e01238-17
work_keys_str_mv AT akhagan petrobactinisexportedfrombacillusanthracisbytherndtypeexporterapex
AT atripathi petrobactinisexportedfrombacillusanthracisbytherndtypeexporterapex
AT dberger petrobactinisexportedfrombacillusanthracisbytherndtypeexporterapex
AT dhsherman petrobactinisexportedfrombacillusanthracisbytherndtypeexporterapex
AT pchanna petrobactinisexportedfrombacillusanthracisbytherndtypeexporterapex
AT ericajohnson petrobactinisexportedfrombacillusanthracisbytherndtypeexporterapex
_version_ 1721339795902300160