Mutations in the fifth-position glutamate in Pseudomonas aeruginosa pilin affect the transmethylation of the N-terminal phenylalanine

Abstract
The pili of Pseudomonas aeruginosa are composed of 15-kDa pilin monomers that are synthesized in the cytoplasm and assembled in the membrane. Processing occurs between the synthesis and assembly steps. The propilin is cleaved by a unique leader peptidase encoded by pilD, which is adjacent to the pilin structural gene pilA. This generates an N-terminal phenylalanine that is subsequently methylated by an as yet uncharacterized transmethylase. The pili of P. aeruginosa belong to the type IV class of pilins, which share a highly conserved N-terminal region 35 amino acids in length, containing a short leader of 6 or 7 amino acids. Two site-specific mutants in the N-terminal region of the mature pilin were constructed. Reestablishing the fifth-position glutamate in a four amino acid deletion mutant (amino acids 4–7) restored the leader peptidase cleavage but not the methylation. A mutation of the fifth-position glutamate to alanine decreased the degree of methylation of the N-terminal phenylalanine. Pili were not assembled by these mutants as assessed by electron microscopy and sensitivity to pilus-specific bacteriophage. Methylation may be required for recognition of the pilin by the assembly machinery and is not residue specific. The fifth-position glutamate appears to play an important role in transmethylase recognition of the pilin subunit.Key words: Pseudomonas aeruginosa, pilin, transmethylase.

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