GtxA from Gallibacterium anatis, a cytolytic RTX-toxin with a novel domain organisation

Bodil Marie Kristensen, Dorte Frees, Anders Miki Bojesen

    34 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    Gallibacterium anatis is a pathogen in chickens and other avian species where it is a significant cause of salpingitis and peritonitis. We found that bacterial cells and cell-free, filter-sterilised culture supernatant from the haemolytic G. anatis biovar haemolytica were highly cytotoxic towards avian-derived macrophage-like cells (HD11). We obtained the genome sequence of G. anatis 12656-12 and used a rational approach to identify a gene predicted to encode a 2026 amino acid RTX-toxin, which we named GtxA (Gallibacterium toxin). The construction of a gtxA knock-out mutant showed gtxA to be responsible for G. anatis' haemolytic and leukotoxic activity. In addition, Escherichia coli expressing gtxA and an adjacent acyltransferase, gtxC, became cytolytic. GtxA was expressed during in vitro growth and was localised in the extracellular protein fraction in a growth phase dependent manner. GtxA had an unusual modular structure; the C-terminal 1000 amino acids of GtxA were homologous to the classical pore-forming RTX-toxins in other members of Pasteurellaceae. In contrast, the N-terminal approximately 950 amino acids had few significant matches in sequence databases. Expression of truncated GtxA proteins demonstrated that the C-terminal RTX-domain had a lower haemolytic activity than the full-length toxin, indicating that the N-terminal domain was required for maximal haemolytic activity. Cytotoxicity towards HD11 cells was not detected with the C-terminal alone, suggesting that the N-terminal domain plays a critical role for the leukotoxicity.

    Original languageEnglish
    JournalVeterinary Research
    Volume41
    Issue number25
    Number of pages14
    ISSN0928-4249
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - Mar 2010

    Keywords

    • Former LIFE faculty

    Fingerprint

    Dive into the research topics of 'GtxA from Gallibacterium anatis, a cytolytic RTX-toxin with a novel domain organisation'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

    Cite this