INFECTION AND IMMUNITY, Mar. 1999, p. 1072–1078
0019-9567/99/$04.0010
Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Vol. 67, No. 3
Purification and Cloning of a Streptokinase from
Streptococcus uberis
LAUST B. JOHNSEN,1 KNUD POULSEN,2 MOGENS KILIAN,2
AND
TORBEN E. PETERSEN1*
Protein Chemistry Laboratory, Department of Molecular and Structural Biology,1 and Department of
Medical Microbiology and Immunology,2 University of Aarhus, DK-8000 Aarhus C, Denmark
Received 26 May 1998/Returned for modification 6 October 1998/Accepted 17 December 1998
Plasmin is a potent serine proteinase that has an important function in physiological processes in mammals, such as
degradation of extracellular matrix proteins, blood clot dissolution (fibrinolysis), cellular migration, and cancer metastasis.
Plasminogen, the blood-borne zymogen of plasmin, has two
physiological activators, tissue-type plasminogen activator and
urokinase-typeplasminogenactivator.Theseactivatorsarethemselves serine proteinases and activate plasminogen by cleavage
of a single peptide bond. However, in addition to these two
physiological plasminogen activators, several pathogenic microorganisms have developed plasminogen activators which
enable them to exploit host plasmin activity. The generation of
plasmin activity assists the microorganism in proteolytic breakdown of fibrin and other extracellular matrix proteins, which,
in turn, facilitates the bacterial penetration of normal tissue
barriers and ultimately enables bacterial colonization of deeptissue sites (reviewed in references 2 and 19). Some bacteria
that produce plasminogen activators also produce plasmin(ogen) surface receptors. The binding of plasmin(ogen) to these
receptors equips the bacteria with host-derived plasmin activity, and at the same time, the receptors shield the bound plasmin from physiological inhibitors (11, 12). Bacterial plasminogen activators include the streptokinase produced by a variety
of pathogenic Streptococcus species and the staphylokinase
produced by Staphylococcus aureus. Due to its fibrinolytic potential, streptokinase is currently used as a thrombolytic therapy drug. Streptokinase and staphylokinase have unique, but
slightly different, mechanisms of plasminogen activation. Streptokinase and staphylokinase form 1:1 stoichiometric plasminogen activator complexes with plasminogen and plasmin, respectively. Streptokinase induces a conformation of the serine
proteinase domain of plasminogen, which exposes the active
site of the proteinase without prior proteolytic cleavage, there-
by providing the streptokinase-plasminogen complex with what
has been called “virgin” enzyme activity (23). In contrast, the
staphylokinase-plasminogen complex is proteolytically inactive
but can be transformed into the active staphylokinase-plasmin
complex by activation with plasmin (4). Notably, streptokinases
isolated from different strains of streptococci possess an intrinsic species specificity for their target plasminogen molecules
that parallels the host range of the microorganisms (21).
Two novel plasminogen activators have recently been described. They were derived from the bovine mastitis-inducing
pathogens Streptococcus uberis (14) and Streptococcus dysgalactiae (17) and showed specificity to bovine plasminogen. Mastitis is an inflammatory disease of the mammary gland. In the
United Kingdom, S. uberis is responsible for around 20% of all
clinical cases of bovine mastitis (3), and in Denmark, 23% of
the mastitis cases in organic dairy herds could be connected
with infection by S. uberis (26). Leigh (13) showed that the
activity associated with the plasminogen activator secreted
from S. uberis was different from that of Streptococcus pyogenes
(Lancefield group A) and Streptococcus equisimilis (Lancefield
group C) strains, as it activated bovine but not human plasminogen. It also differed from Lancefield group E activity by
not activating porcine plasminogen (13). By activation of plasminogen to plasmin through the action of its plasminogen
activator, S. uberis was also shown to be able to acquire surface-localized plasmin activity (16), and plasmin binding to the
bacterial surface was susceptible to increasing concentrations
of NaCl and lysine (18). For a mastitis-inducing pathogen, the
production of a plasminogen activator could be of importance
in two ways. In addition to generation of plasmin activity needed for degradation of extracellular matrix proteins and subsequent colonization, the activation of endogenous plasminogen
present in milk would lead to hydrolysis of milk proteins and,
thereby, liberation of peptides from which S. uberis could obtain essential amino acids (10).
In this study we have performed purification and partial
amino acid sequencing of the plasminogen activator from
S. uberis and have cloned and sequenced its gene. By sequence
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Protein Chemistry Laboratory, Gustav Wieds Vej 10C, DK-8000 Aarhus C, Denmark. Phone:
(45) 86202000. Fax: (45) 86136597. E-mail:
[email protected].
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A bovine plasminogen activator was purified from the culture supernatant of the bovine pathogen Streptococcus uberis NCTC 3858. After the final reverse-phase high-performance liquid chromatography step a single
protein with a molecular mass of 32 kDa was detected in the active fraction. A partial peptide map was established, and degenerate primers were designed and used for amplification of fragments of the gene encoding
the activator. Inverse PCR was subsequently used for obtaining the full-length gene. The S. uberis plasminogen
activator gene (skc) encodes a protein consisting of 286 amino acids including a signal peptide of 25 amino
acids. In an amino acid sequence comparison the cloned activator showed an identity of approximately 26% to
the streptokinases isolated from Streptococcus equisimilis and Streptococcus pyogenes. Interestingly, the activator
from S. uberis was found to lack the C-terminal domain possessed by the streptokinase from S. equisimilis. This
is apparently a general feature of the streptokinases of this species; biochemical and genetic analysis of 10
additional strains of S. uberis revealed that 9 of these were highly similar to strain NCTC 3858. Sequencing of
the skc gene from three of these strains indicated that the amino acid sequence of the protein is highly conserved within the species.
CHARACTERIZATION OF A STREPTOKINASE FROM S. UBERIS
comparison, the plasminogen activator was shown to be related
to the already-known streptokinases.
TABLE 1. Amino acid sequences of tryptic peptides and
derived degenerate oligonucleotide sequences
Amino acida
sequence
Peak
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Chemicals and reagents. Super Taq polymerase was from HT Biotechnology
(Cambridge, United Kingdom), Ready to Go PCR beads were from Pharmacia
(Uppsala, Sweden), oligonucleotides were from DNA Technology (Aarhus, Denmark), and all other enzymes were from New England Biolabs (Hitchin, United
Kingdom). PCR was performed in a Hybaid (Middlesex, United Kingdom)
ABACUS thermal cycler. Sequencing was performed with a dye terminator cycle
sequencing kit from PE Applied Biosystems (Foster City, Calif.), and ProBlott
membranes were from the same supplier. The Wizard DNA purification kit was
from Promega (Madison, Wis.). Sequencing, ligation, transformation of Escherichia coli, DNA preparation, PCR, and other DNA-modifying processes were
performed according to the manufacturers’ recommendations or standard laboratory procedures, unless otherwise indicated. For cloning of PCR products, a
TOPO cloning kit from Invitrogen (Carlsbad, Calif.) was used. Prestained molecular mass marker proteins (Seeblue) and 10 to 20% Tris-glycine-polyacrylamide gels were from NOVEX (San Diego, Calif.). All protein purification
columns were from Pharmacia. Modified trypsin was from Promega, S-2251
[(H-D-Val)-Leu-Lys-pNA] was from Chromogenix (Mölndal, Sweden), bovine
[Asp1]plasminogen was from American Diagnostica (Greenwich, Conn.), plasminogen-depleted bovine fibrinogen was from Enzyme Research Laboratories
(South Bend, Ind.), and human thrombin was from Sigma (St. Louis, Mo.).
Alkaline phosphatase-conjugated swine anti-rabbit immunoglobulin G was from
Dako (Glostrup, Denmark), and Nitro Blue Tetrazolium and 5-bromo-4-chloro3-indolylphosphate p-toluidine salt were from Sigma.
Identification, growth, and fingerprinting of S. uberis strains. Strain NCTC
3858 was obtained from the National Collection of Type Cultures (Colindale,
UK). Strains 120-295-1 (5SK880), 137-391-1 (5SK881), 149-451-2 (5SK882),
156-162-1 (5SK883), and 159-684-1 (5SK884), isolated from different herds in
Denmark, and strains 5793-LR (9057-7) (5SK885), 9758-34-RR (5SK886),
27-RR (5SK887), 9057-14-LR (5SK888), and 9756-296-LF (5SK889), isolated
from different herds in the United States in 1994, were kindly provided by F.
Aarestrup, Danish Veterinary Laboratory, Copenhagen, Denmark. All strains
were grown overnight in Todd-Hewitt broth (Difco Laboratories, Detroit,
Mich.). The identities of the strains were verified by standard techniques, including demonstration of b-glucuronidase and alkaline phosphatase activities. All
S. uberis strains used in this study were shown to represent distinct clones as
shown by digestion of genomic DNA by MspI and fragment analysis by agarose
gel electrophoresis (data not shown).
Plasminogen activator activity assay. Plasminogen activator activity was identified by the ability of the activator to activate bovine plasminogen to plasmin.
The formation of plasmin was measured by its hydrolysis of the chromogenic
peptidyl anilide substrate S-2251. The reaction was performed in a total of 0.2 ml
containing 0.1 M Tris-HCl (pH 7.4), 0.02% Tween 80, 0.05 mM [Asp1]plasminogen, and 0.5 mM S-2251; the reaction was initiated by addition of the sample
dissolved in the various elution buffers used during purification. The reaction was
monitored at 405 nm over a period of 1 h in a Bio-Tek EL 311 BioKinetics
Reader (Bio-Tek Instruments, Winooski, Vt.).
Purification of the plasminogen activator. Twenty liters of bacterial culture
was centrifuged at 3,000 3 g at 4°C until the supernatant could be collected. The
supernatant was then adjusted to 38% saturation with (NH4)2SO4 and to 0.05
(wt/vol) saturation with NaN3. The solution was stirred overnight at 4°C and
centrifuged at 3,000 3 g for 30 min. The precipitate was dissolved in 150 ml of
H2O, dialyzed against 50 mM NH4HCO3 (pH 8.9), and frozen at 220°C. The
sample was then applied to a 50-ml DEAE-Sepharose column and eluted with a
gradient (0.05 to 1.0 M) of NH4HCO3 (pH 8.9). Active fractions were pooled,
dialyzed against 20 mM NH4HCO3 (pH 8.0), and freeze-dried. The sample was
then dissolved in 50 mM CHOOH–6 M urea (pH 4.0), applied to a Mono-S HR
10/10 HPLC column, and eluted with a 0 to 1 M NaCl gradient in the same
buffer. Active fractions were dialyzed against 20 mM NH4HCO3 (pH 8.0) and
lyophilized. The sample was then redissolved in 0.1% trifluoroacetic acid, applied
to a reverse-phase Sephasil C8 SC 2.1/10 column, and eluted with a gradient of
0 to 80% isopropanol in 0.1% trifluoroacetic acid.
Generation of peptides and amino acid sequence analysis. Material eluted
from the Mono-S column was subjected to sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) and blotted onto ProBlott membranes. The
band corresponding to the plasminogen activator was excised from several lanes
and processed essentially as described previously (5). The generated tryptic
peptides were applied to a reverse-phase mRPC C2/C18 SC 2.1/10 SMART
column and eluted with a gradient of 0 to 60% CH3CN in 0.1% trifluoroacetic
acid on a SMART high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) system.
The resolved peptide peaks were subjected to automated Edman degradation on
an ABI 477A/120A protein sequencer (Applied Biosystems) by using standard
programs.
Cloning of the streptokinase gene by PCR with degenerate primers and by
inverse PCR. Genomic S. uberis DNA was isolated as described previously (9).
Several degenerate oligonucleotides corresponding to the obtained partial amino
acid sequences were synthesized. The oligonucleotides were each labeled with
[g-32P]ATP and used as probes in Southern blotting of genomic S. uberis DNA
1073
1c
Y11IDPDENK18
V143QFATK148
2
3
4
5
G51IHHVLTDQNQK62
I1TGYDSDYYAR11
A57ELLDAIR64
E238LGETQSI245
149
Degenerate
oligonucleotideb
Degeneracy
GAYCCNGAYGARAAYAA
TTNGTNGCRAAYTGNAC
(reverse)
64
256
TGNGTYTCNCCIARYTC
(reverse)
128
158
6
D GEFHPLPIF
N terminus I1TGYDSDYYARYIDPD16 TAYGAYWSIGAYTAYTAYGC
(forward)
128
a
Underlining indicates amino acids used for design of degenerate oligonucleotides.
b
Ambiguous bases are abbreviated as follows: N stands for A, C, T, or G; R
stands for A or G; Y stands for C or T; I stands for deoxyinosine; W stands for
A or T; and S stands for C or G.
c
The double sequence present in peak 1 could be interpreted since the sequence YIPDENK was recognized as derived from the N-terminal sequence.
digested with AflIII (data not shown). Each oligonucleotide hybridized with a
single and the same DNA fragment. The three strongest-hybridizing oligonucleotides were selected as primers (Table 1) in PCRs with 100 ng of genomic DNA,
200 mM deoxynucleoside triphosphate, 4 mM primer, 13 PCR buffer, and 2.5 U
of Super Taq in a total volume of 50 ml and the following cycling parameters (35
cycles): 94°C for 60 s, 50°C for 60 s, and 72°C for 60 s, with an initial denaturation
step of 300 s in the first cycle. For use in inverse PCR, genomic DNA was
digested with BglII and ligated overnight at 14°C at a concentration of 10 ng/ml
in PCR buffer supplemented with 67 mM ATP. The ligated DNA mixture (50 ng)
containing circularized BglII fragments was then used directly as a template in
the inverse PCR with the primers spanning nucleotides 506 to 525 (forward) and
461 to 442 (reverse) (see Fig. 3) and the following cycling parameters (35 cycles):
94°C for 60 s, 55°C for 60 s, and 72°C for 300 s, with an initial denaturation step
of 300 s in the first cycle. Amplification of the total gene was performed by PCR
with primers spanning nucleotides 1 to 19 (forward) and 1131 to 1112 (reverse)
(see Fig. 3) and with 50 ng of genomic DNA, 200 mM deoxynucleoside triphosphate, 0.4 mM primer, 13 PCR buffer, and 2.5 U of Super Taq and the following
cycling parameters (20 cycles): 94°C for 60 s, 55°C for 60 s, and 72°C for 60 s, with
an initial denaturation step at 94°C for 300 s. All PCR products were cloned into
the pCR2.1-TOPO cloning vector and sequenced with vector-specific and custom-designed primers.
Western blotting and zymography analysis of streptokinases produced by
heterologous S. uberis strains. Bacterial culture supernatants were mixed 1:1 with
sample buffer (20 mM Tris [pH 6.8], 2% SDS, 20% glycerol) and heated at 95°C,
and samples were subjected to SDS-PAGE on 10 to 20% Tris-glycine NOVEX
gels with a standard running buffer (25 mM Tris [pH 8.3], 0.2 M glycine, 0.1%
SDS). For Western blotting, the gel was blotted onto a ProBlott membrane in a
transfer buffer consisting of 10 mM 3-(cyclohexylamino)-1-propanosulfonic acid
(CAPS) (pH 11.0), 10% (vol/vol) methanol, and 0.05% SDS. The membrane was
blocked with 2% Tween 20–0.5 M NaCl–0.05 M Tris (pH 7.4), and all subsequent
washing and incubation steps were performed in 0.1% Tween 20–0.5 M NaCl–
0.05 M Tris (pH 7.4). Polyclonal antibodies against the S. uberis plasminogen
activator were raised in rabbits by immunization with S. uberis plasminogen
activator, produced in recombinant E. coli (unpublished results), and the resulting serum was used without purification. Alkaline phosphatase-conjugated swine
anti-rabbit immunoglobulin G antibodies were used as secondary antibodies. The
zymography was essentially performed as described previously (1), using SDSPAGE conditions as for Western blotting and agarose gels containing 1.7 mg of
bovine fibrinogen per ml and 8 mg of bovine plasminogen per ml, and fibrin
polymerization was initiated by addition of 0.03 U of human thrombin per ml.
PCR and sequence analysis of skc genes in heterologous S. uberis strains. The
39 region of the skc gene was amplified with primers (0.4 mM) spanning nucleotides 506 to 525 (forward) and 1131 to 1112 (reverse), 1 ng of genomic DNA,
Ready to Go PCR beads, and the following cycling parameters (30 cycles): 94°C
for 60 s, 52°C for 60 s, and 72°C for 90 s, with an initial denaturation step at 94°C
for 300 s (nucleotide numbering refers to Fig. 3). The full-length skc gene was
amplified with primers spanning nucleotides 1 to 19 (forward) and 1131 to 1112
(reverse) and otherwise the same conditions as described above. PCR fragments
were analyzed by agarose gel electrophoresis. The PCR fragments containing the
full-length skc gene were purified of PCR components by using a Wizard DNA
purification column and sequenced on both strands with appropriate primers.
Nucleotide sequence accession numbers. The sequences for the skc genes from
strains SK882, SK884, and SK889 have been deposited in the EMBL nucleotide
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VOL. 67, 1999
JOHNSEN ET AL.
FIG. 1. Reducing SDS-PAGE of material from different steps during purification of the plasminogen activator from S. uberis. Lanes: 1, ammonium sulfate
precipitate; 2, pooled active fractions from DEAE–ion-exchange chromatography; 3, pooled active fractions from Mono-S HPLC; 4, the most active fraction
from C8 Sephasil reverse-phase HPLC. M, molecular mass markers; molecular
masses are in kilodaltons.
sequence database under accession no. AJ131604, AJ131605, and AJ131631,
respectively.
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
Purification, generation of peptides, and amino acid sequence
analysis. The bovine plasminogen activator from S. uberis
NCTC 3858 was purified from the culture supernatant by a
combination of ammonium sulfate precipitation, DEAE–ionexchange chromatography, denaturing Mono-S HPLC, and reverse-phase HPLC. Interestingly, the plasminogen activator
INFECT. IMMUN.
appeared to be a very stable protein, as demonstrated by the
fact that activity survived treatment with strong denaturing
agents, such as 6 M urea, 8 M guanidinium hydrochloride, and
60% formic acid (data not shown), or passage over reversephase columns. The activator was identified as a 32-kDa protein, since only this band was present in the active fraction
eluted from the C8 column (Fig. 1). The N-terminal sequence
derived from this band (Table 1) did not show any similarities
to known sequences as revealed by BLAST homology searching. The recovery of protein from the reverse-phase C8 column
was insufficient for generation of suitable amounts of peptides
for use in amino acid sequencing, and therefore, tryptic degradation on the blot was carried out on material from the
Mono-S column. These tryptic peptides were separated on a
C2/C18 reverse-phase HPLC column (Fig. 2), and N-terminal
sequence analysis was performed (Table 1).
Cloning of the gene for the plasminogen activator. The identified amino acid sequences were used for design of degenerate
oligonucleotides (Table 1), and these were subsequently used
as primers for PCR on genomic DNA of S. uberis NCTC 3858,
in order to isolate the gene encoding the plasminogen activator. The degenerate primer pair corresponding to the amino
acid sequences YDSDYYA (forward) and VQFATK (reverse)
yielded a single band of ;400 bp, and the primer pair corresponding to YDSDYYA (forward) and ELGETQ (reverse)
yielded a single band of ;700 bp. By Southern blotting experiments, the degenerate oligonucleotide corresponding to the
sequence DYYARY was shown to hybridize with these amplicons, indicating that the PCR products were amplified from
the plasminogen activator gene. The two PCR products were
then cloned into the pCR2.1-TOPO vector and sequenced.
The resulting sequences of the two fragments overlapped and
comprised the codons for all the sequenced peptides, and they
were subsequently used for design of primers for use in inverse
FIG. 2. Tryptic peptides derived from degradation on the blot were separated by HPLC with a narrow-bore C2/C18 reverse-phase column. The sequences of labeled
peaks are shown in Table 1. TFA, trifluoroacetic acid.
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CHARACTERIZATION OF A STREPTOKINASE FROM S. UBERIS
1075
FIG. 3. Nucleotide sequence and deduced amino acid sequence (in boldface) of the streptokinase gene from S. uberis. Primers used in cloning of the gene are
underlined, and peptide sequences used for design of degenerate primers are shown in italics and underlined. p, stop codon; ∨, signal peptide cleavage site.
PCR. By using primers spanning nucleotides 461 to 442 (reverse) and 506 to 525 (forward) (Fig. 3) and the BglII-cut and
religated genomic DNA as a template in a PCR, an appropriate DNA fragment of approximately 5 kbp was amplified. This
fragment was subsequently cloned into plasmid pCR2.1-TOPO
and partially sequenced from both ends. An open reading
frame (ORF) encoding a streptokinase-like protein could be
deduced from the combined sequence information for the
PCR fragments amplified with degenerate primers and the
fragment obtained by inverse PCR. Finally, the primers spanning nucleotides 1 to 19 (reverse) and 1131 to 1112 (reverse)
(Fig. 3) were used in a PCR amplifying the full-length streptokinase gene on one DNA fragment. This PCR product was
then cloned into the pCR2.1-TOPO cloning vector, and three
independent clones were sequenced on both strands to control
for PCR-introduced mutations (Fig. 3). The cloned streptokinase gene contains an ORF with the potential of encoding a
protein of 286 amino acids. The ORF is preceded by the sequence GGAGA, which may function as a ribosome binding
site (24, 25). The N-terminal amino acid sequence obtained for
the secreted streptokinase was identified 25 amino acids downstream from the sequence corresponding to the ATG start codon in the ORF, indicating that Ala-Ile in positions 25 and 26
is the cleavage site for the signal peptidase. In support of this,
the 25 N-terminal amino acids encoded by the ORF display
features typical of a signal peptide (27). The deduced mature
protein thus comprises 261 amino acids with a calculated molecular mass of 30.7 kDa, in agreement with the 32 kDa estimated by SDS-PAGE.
Diversity of the streptokinases among S. uberis strains. To
investigate whether the purified and cloned streptokinase from
S. uberis NCTC 3858 was representative of streptokinases produced by other strains of the same species, the properties of
streptokinases from 10 additional S. uberis strains were inves-
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VOL. 67, 1999
JOHNSEN ET AL.
FIG. 4. Zymography (left) and Western blotting analysis (right). Supernatants (4 ml) from each strain were mixed with sample buffer and loaded in lanes
as follows: 1, NCTC 3858; 2, SK880; 3, SK881; 4, SK882; 5, SK883; 6, SK884; 7,
SK885; 8, SK886; 9, SK887; 10, SK888; and 11, SK889. M, molecular mass
markers; molecular masses are in kilodaltons.
tigated by Western blotting, zymography, and PCR and those
for 3 of the strains were investigated by gene sequencing. Nine
of the 10 strains were shown by Western blotting and zymography to produce streptokinases of similar molecular masses,
although for 2 of the strains, SK881 and SK886, the amounts of
streptokinase produced were insufficient to allow reproduction
of lysis zones in the zymography (Fig. 4). In agreement with
this result, these strains gave rise to only very faint bands in
Western blotting analysis (Fig. 4). The relative intensities of
the Western bands corresponded roughly to the sizes of lysis
zones in the zymography and were also in accordance with
activities measured by the plasminogen activation assay (data
not shown). These data probably reflect different expression
levels of the streptokinases among the investigated strains under the conditions used rather than different reactivities to the
polyclonal antibodies or differences in catalytic strength in the
plasminogen activator complexes. Further work with standardized growth of the bacteria will be needed to clarify this point.
Interestingly, one strain produced a streptokinase of a higher molecular mass (;45 kDa) (Fig. 4). The higher molecular
mass of this streptokinase corresponds to the molecular masses
of streptokinases from several other species and could indicate
the presence of an extra domain (see below). Presumably, this
streptokinase has a markedly different primary structure since
no antibody cross-reactivity could be detected by Western blotting.
To evaluate the gene structures and identities of the different streptokinases, amplification of the 39 region nucleotides
(506 to 1131 [Fig. 3]) of the skc gene was attempted. All 10
strains except strain SK880 yielded a band of ;600 bp, indicating the presence of an skc gene with a 39 region similar to
that of the skc gene of strain NCTC 3858. Attempts to amplify
the full-length skc gene (nucleotides 1 to 1131) resulted in
appropriate PCR fragments from all strains except strain
SK880 and SK883. The genes from strains SK882, SK884, and
SK889 were subsequently sequenced. These three skc genes all
have the potential of encoding proteins of 286 amino acids with
a very high degree of identity to that of strain NCTC 3858. The
amino acid substitutions found in these strains are summarized
as follows (numbering refers to strain NCTC 3858): strains
SK882 and SK884 (identical) have the substitutions Val79,
Gln115, Gln124, Leu211, Gln240, and His242; and strain
SK889 has the substitutions Val79 and Ser211. The identities
of the skc genes of strains SK882 and SK884 and their divergence from that of strain SK889 are in agreement with their
geographical origin, as strains SK882 and SK884 were isolated
in Denmark and SK889 was isolated in the United States.
In summary, a single strain, SK880, produced a plasminogen
activator which could not be recognized by heterologous anti-
INFECT. IMMUN.
bodies, and its gene was apparently too diverse to allow amplification by the primers used. Nine of the 10 investigated
strains contained skc genes with similar structures and produced a streptokinase with properties similar to those of strain
NCTC 3858. Based on these data, and the sequence analysis of
three of the strains, the skc gene seems to be highly conserved
in its species. The skc gene of strain NCTC 3858 was used for
comparison with other species.
Comparison of the streptokinasesS. uberis sequence to the sequences and domain boundaries of other streptokinases. Alignment of the deduced amino acid sequence of the streptokinase
from S. uberis NCTC 3858 (streptokinaseS. uberis) to the sequences of three other streptokinases, streptokinaseStreptococcus
(isolated from a group G streptococcus [28]), streptokinaseS. equisimilis (20), and streptokinaseS. pyogenes (29), showed
identities of 26.4, 26.0, and 25.7%, respectively; the plasminogen activator from S. uberis is thus related to the other known
streptokinases (Fig. 5A). However, among the currently known
streptokinases, streptokinaseS. uberis seems to be the least conserved, since the degrees of identity for six other streptokinases
from serological groups A, C, and G range between 80 and 98%
(8). In line with this observation, no homology to streptokinaseS. uberis could be found at the nucleotide level by BLAST
searching. The fact that streptococci with different host specificities produce streptokinases that show considerable sequence diversity but conserved plasminogen activation potential indicates that generation of plasmin activity is important
for the pathogenesis of these bacteria. On the other hand, the
high degree of amino acid sequence diversity also indicates
that only a low degree of sequence constraint is needed for the
ability of the streptokinase to activate plasminogen.
StreptokinaseS. equisimilis was previously suggested to comprise three domains (22), and this has recently been confirmed by the elucidation of the crystal structure of the streptokinaseS. equisimilis-microplasmin plasminogen activator complex
(30). Investigation of the multiple-sequence alignment (Fig.
5A) in relation to the proposed domain boundaries of streptokinaseS. equisimilis (summarized in Fig. 5B) reveals several
interesting features. StreptokinaseS. equisimilis consists of 414
amino acids (;47 kDa) and thus comprises 153 amino acids
more than streptokinaseS. uberis, which is mainly due to the fact
that streptokinaseS. uberis was found to lack the C-terminal domain. Besides, the first half (residues 1 to 64) of the N-terminal
domain in streptokinaseS. equisimilis has no similarity (6.7% identity) to the corresponding region (residues 1 to 45) of streptokinaseS. uberis, which, in addition, is 18 amino acids shorter. In
contrast, the second half of the N-terminal domain of streptokinaseS. equisimilis has a relatively high degree of identity (33.7%)
to the corresponding region in streptokinaseS. uberis. The central domain of streptokinaseS. equisimilis has an identity of 28.7%
to the corresponding region of streptokinaseS. uberis. In summary, the major differences between streptokinaseS. uberis and
streptokinaseS. equisimilis are apparently the deletion of the Cterminal domain and the lack of identity in the N-terminal part
(residues 1 to 64). This could indicate that the intrinsic species
specificity determinants of the streptokinases mainly are located in the same regions. Future experiments employing
domain swapping between streptokinaseS. equisimilis or streptokinaseS. pyogenes and streptokinaseS. uberis might evaluate the
species specificity of separate domains of the streptokinases.
Recent work has indicated that the plasminogen molecule part
of the plasminogen activator complex streptokinaseS. equisimilisplasminogen binds to the C-terminal domain of streptokinaseS. equisimilis, while the substrate plasminogen molecule binds
to the N-terminal domain (32). Other studies have shown that
the minimal streptokinase sequence requirement for genera-
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CHARACTERIZATION OF A STREPTOKINASE FROM S. UBERIS
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FIG. 5. (A) Multiple alignment of deduced amino acid sequences of secreted streptokinases from a group G streptococcus (sp; accession no. P10519), S. equisimilis
(equisimilis; accession no. P00779), S. pyogenes (pyogenes; accession no. P96471), and S. uberis NCTC 3858 (uberis; accession no. AJ006413). Identical amino acids are
indicated by black boxes, and similar amino acids are indicated by shaded boxes. (B) Schematic presentation of alignment of streptokinaseS. uberis to streptokinaseS. equisimilis. The domain assignment of streptokinaseS. equisimilis is according to reference 22. The N-terminal region (residues 1 to 64) of streptokinaseS. equisimilis is
quickly removed by proteolysis (22). The degree of identity between corresponding regions is indicated, as are amino acid positions at domain boundaries. aa, amino acids.
tion of amidolytic activity is fragments containing sequence
from both the central and the C-terminal domains (31). The
present study, using a streptokinase lacking the C-terminal
domain while retaining catalytic activity, thus demonstrates
that the function of the C-terminal domain can be compensated for by mutations in the N-terminal and/or C-terminal
domain. In theory, the deletion of the C-terminal domain of
streptokinaseS. uberis could also suggest a novel mechanism of
plasminogen activation mediated by streptokinaseS. uberis, e.g.,
through dimerization (14).
Potential of streptokinaseS. uberis as a vaccine agent. Vaccination of cows against infection of S. uberis has been investigated by injection of live S. uberis (strain 0140J), but immunization proved to be efficient only against the homologous strain
(6, 7). Data indicated that the key virulence determinants were
not present on the surfaces of the bacteria, and it was suggested that factors produced and secreted by the bacteria in vivo
could fulfill this role. In agreement with these data, promising
results have been obtained, with a small number of cows,
by immunization with a partially purified preparation of the
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VOL. 67, 1999
JOHNSEN ET AL.
S. uberis plasminogen activator and subsequent experimental
challenge with a heterologous strain (15). The isolation and
cloning of streptokinaseS. uberis will allow specific evaluation of
its potential as a vaccine agent. The highly conserved amino
acid sequences found among the vast majority of the investigated strains, as well as the observed antibody cross-reactivity,
suggest that a possible vaccine would be efficacious also against
most of the heterologous strains. An exciting task for the future will be to analyze at the molecular level additional plasminogen activators important for bacterial pathogenesis, e.g.,
from strain SK880, and to test their efficacies as vaccine agents.
Also, the potential of streptokinaseS. uberis production in Lactococcus lactis (unpublished results) makes it attractive to investigate whether lactic acid bacteria could be used as vaccine
carriers by mediating antigen presentation to the mucosal immune system.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This work is part of the FØTEK program supported by the Danish
Dairy Research Foundation (Danish Dairy Board), the Danish government, and the Danish Medical Research Council.
The kind gift of S. uberis strains from Frank Aarestrup is highly
appreciated.
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