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Identification of novel carbohydrate modifications on Campylobacter jejuni 11168 flagellin using metabolomics-based approaches Susan M. Logan 1 , Joseph P. M. Hui 2 , Evgeny Vinogradov 1 , Annie J. Aubry 1 , Jeremy E. Melanson 2 , John F. Kelly 1 , Harald Nothaft 1 and Evelyn C. Soo 2 1 NRC-Institute for Biological Sciences, Ottawa, Canada 2 NRC-Institute for Marine Biosciences, Halifax, Canada Campylobacter is an important human pathogen and the most prevalent causative agent of bacterial gastro- enteritis worldwide, with Campylobacter jejuni repre- senting over 90% of all Campylobacter infections [1]. Most cases of Campylobacter infections are sporadic and can be traced to the consumption of undercooked (or the handling of) contaminated chicken, but out- breaks, although rare, do occur mainly as a result of the consumption of contaminated sources of water or unpasteurized milk [2]. Although the majority of cases of Campylobacteriosis are self-limiting, complications can occur and these range in severity from bloody diarrhoea and fever lasting over 1 week, to more severe and life-threatening conditions, such as the Keywords Campylobacter; flagellin; glycosylation; metabolomics; pseudaminic acid Correspondence E. C. Soo, MS Metabolomics Group, NRC-Institute for Marine Biosciences, 1411 Oxford Street, Halifax, NS B3H 3Z1, Canada Fax: +1 902 426 9413 Tel: +1 902 426 0780 E-mail: evelyn.soo@nrc-cnrc.gc.ca (Received 22 September 2008, revised 3 December 2008, accepted 5 December 2008) doi:10.1111/j.1742-4658.2008.06840.x It is well known that the flagellin of Campylobacter jejuni is extensively gly- cosylated by pseudaminic acid and the related acetamindino derivative, in addition to flagellin glycosylation being essential for motility and coloniza- tion of host cells. Recently, the use of metabolomics permitted the unequiv- ocal characterization of unique flagellin modifications in Campylobacter, including novel legionaminic acid sugars in Campylobacter coli, which had been impossible to ascertain in earlier studies using proteomics-based approaches. To date, the precise identities of the flagellin glycosylation modifications have only been elucidated for C. jejuni 81-176 and C. coli VC167 and those present in the first genome-sequenced strain C. jejuni 11168 remain elusive due to lability and respective levels of individual gly- can modifications. We report the characterization of the carbohydrate modifications on C. jejuni 11168 flagellin using metabolomics-based approaches. Detected as their corresponding CMP-linked precursors, struc- tural information on the flagellin modifications was obtained using a com- bination of MS and NMR spectroscopy. In addition to the pseudaminic acid and legionaminic acid sugars known to be present on Campylobacter flagellin, two unusual 2,3-di-O-methylglyceric acid modifications of a nonu- losonate sugar were identified. By performing a metabolomic analysis of selected isogenic mutants of genes from the flagellin glycosylation locus of this pathogen, these novel CMP-linked precursors were confirmed to be di-O-methylglyceric acid derivatives of pseudaminic acid and the related acetamidino sugar. This is the first comprehensive analysis of the flagellar modifications in C. jejuni 11168 and structural elucidation of di-O-methyl- glyceric acid derivatives of pseudaminic acid on Campylobacter flagellin. Abbreviations HILIC, hydrophilic interaction liquid chromatography; HMBC, heteronuclear multiple bond correlation; Pse, pseudaminic acid. 1014 FEBS Journal 276 (2009) 1014–1023 ª 2009 The Authors Journal compilation ª 2009 FEBS post-infection neuropathy Guillain–Barre ´ Syndrome [3] and rare malignant lymphomas of the small intestine known as immunoproliferative small intestine disease [4]. Flagellae comprise an important virulence factor of many bacterial pathogens that confers motility and allows colonization of host cells. In Campylobacter, the major structural protein FlaA must be glycosylated for flagellar filament assembly [5] and, given the impor- tance of motility in infectivity, there is tremendous potential to target the flagellin glycosylation process in the development of novel antimicrobial therapies [6]. For some time, there have been extensive studies on flagellin glycosylation in Campylobacter in terms of the identification of the glycosyl moieties present on the flagellar protein and the genes involved in the bio- synthetic process. The complete genome sequence of C. jejuni 11168 published in 2000 [7] revealed a flagel- lin glycosylation locus consisting of approximately 50 genes, and included genes that displayed significant homology to sialic acid biosynthesis genes. Studies using proteomics-based methods identified the 5,7-di-N-acetylated derivative of 5,7-diamino-3,5,7, 9-tetradeoxy-l-glycero-l-manno-nonulosonic acid [5,7- di-N-acetyl-pseudaminic acid (Pse), Pse5Ac7Ac] and its acetamidino derivative to be the major glycosyl modifi- cations on C. jejuni 81-176 flagellin in addition to minor amounts of two related glycans (Pse5Ac7A- c8OAc, Pse5Ac7Ac8O-GlnAc) [8,9]. Campylobac- ter coli VC167 flagellin was also shown to contain Pse5Ac7Ac, as well as two other novel legionaminic acid derivatives that were not found on flagellin from C. jejuni 81-176. These novel legionaminic acid deriva- tives were synthesized exclusively by the ptm genes, which were present within the flagellar glycosylation locus of this strain [10]. However, due to the labile nat- ure of many of these carbohydrate modifications and their considerably low abundance on the flagellin pro- tein, attempts to characterize the precise structures of many of these observed carbohydrates using the estab- lished proteomics-based approaches were unsuccessful. In addition, although the identification of biosynthetic genes had been made via mutagenesis studies [5], the functional characterization of the flagellar glycan bio- synthetic enzymes and nonulosonate sugar pathways was poorly described. Metabolomics has recently emerged as an invalu- able tool for the study of poorly characterized meta- bolic pathways. In the first metabolomic study of Campylobacter, a targeted metabolomic screen of C. jejuni 81-176 revealed the tremendous potential for using metabolomics to identify unknown substrates and elucidate the role of genes in the biosynthesis of the novel flagellin glycan structures [11]. This work led to expanded studies of the flagellin glycosylation locus in Campylobacter [12,13] and highlighted the innovative use of metabolomics as an alternative to proteomics-based approaches [8–10,14] to gain precise structural information on novel carbohydrate moieties that glycosylate the flagellar protein. The use of hydrophilic interaction liquid chromatography (HI- LIC)-MS in these recent studies was critical because it allowed discrimination of metabolites with the same mass-to-charge (m ⁄ z) ratios, which would otherwise be indistinguishable using MS alone. The HILIC-MS method allowed the separation of complex mixtures of CMP-linked nonulosonic acids and the large-scale purification of these novel metabolites for NMR analysis. The resolution afforded by HILIC for sugar-nucleotides ultimately led to the unexpected identification of a family of legionaminic acid sugars in C. coli VC167, which had previously been thought to be derivatives of Pse [10,13]. As noted earlier, in contrast to C. jejuni 81-176 and C. coli VC167, there is much less knowledge of the fla- gellin glycosylation process and the precise nature of the flagellar glycans of genome-sequenced strain C. je- juni 11168. Comparative analysis of the flagellin glyco- sylation locus of these three strains shows the presence of genes known to be involved in the biosynthesis of Pse [15] legionaminic acid [13] and related derivatives in C. jejuni 11168. It is noteworthy that the flagellin glycosylation locus of C. jejuni 11168 is more complex than either C. jejuni 81-176 or C. coli VC167, suggest- ing a genetic potential for C. jejuni 11168 to glycosy- late its flagellin with additional novel glycans. Given the relative ease of gaining precise structural informa- tion on unique flagellin modifications using metabolo- mics approaches [12,13], the present study provides a comprehensive study of the flagellar glycan structures of C. jejuni 11168 flagellin. Results Metabolomic analysis of wild-type C. jejuni 11168 The metabolome of wild-type C. jejuni 11168 was screened for potential biosynthetic sugar-nucleotides relating to the carbohydrate moieties found on its fla- gellin using an established HILIC-MS method [12]. During precursor ion scanning for ions characteristic of CMP (m ⁄ z 322), an intracellular pool of eight CMP-linked sugars was detected within cell lysates of the wild-type strain (Fig. 1). Upon closer examination of these CMP-linked sugars, it was observed that the retention times of six of the CMP-linked sugars and S. M. Logan et al. Flagellin glycosylation in C. jejuni FEBS Journal 276 (2009) 1014–1023 ª 2009 The Authors Journal compilation ª 2009 FEBS 1015 their corresponding m ⁄ z values were consistent with those obtained in earlier metabolomic studies of C. jejuni 81-176 and C. coli VC167 [12,13], identify- ing these metabolites as the CMP-linked precur- sors of Pse5Ac7Ac, Pse5Ac7Am, Leg5Ac7Ac, Leg5Am7Ac, Leg5MeAm7Ac and Neu5Ac (Leg is 5,7-diamino-3,5,7,9-tetradeoxy-d-glycero-d-galacto-non ulosonic acid). The presence of these CMP-linked pre- cursors in C. jejuni 11168 is not surprising because the genes known to be involved in their biosynthesis in C. jejuni 81-176 (Pse5Ac7Ac, Pse5Ac7Am and Neu5Ac) or C. coli VC167 (Leg5Ac7Ac, Leg5Am7Ac, Leg5MeAm7Ac) are also present in the 11168 strain. However, in addition to these well-characterized CMP-linked intermediates, two unknown CMP-linked precursors were also observed in the metabolome of C. jejuni 11168. As shown in Fig. 1, one of these novel CMP-sugars was detected at 13.6 min as [M ) H] ) ions at m ⁄ z 712, whereas the second novel CMP-sugar was observed at 17.3 min at m ⁄ z 711. In the positive mode, oxonium ions corresponding to these novel CMP-linked sugars are produced and these were observed as precursor ions at m ⁄ z 714 (I) and m ⁄ z 713 (II) (data not shown). MS analysis of 11168 flagellin glycopeptides To confirm that the corresponding glycan moieties of these novel CMP-sugars (m ⁄ z 711, 389 Da; m ⁄ z 712, 390 Da) were actually present on the flagellin protein of C. jejuni 11168, flagellin glycopeptides were analysed by LC-MS ⁄ MS following enzymatic digestion of flagel- lin protein. The presence of the oxonium ions m ⁄ z 390 and 391, which correspond to glycans of mass 389 and 390 Da on two flagellar glycopeptides, is indicated in Fig. 2. These two glycan modifications were the most abundant modification found on all flagellin glycopep- tides examined (data not shown). Structural analysis of I and II by high resolution MS The HILIC-MS and precursor ion scanning method provides a highly selective means for detecting sugar- Fig. 1. Intracellular CMP-sugars detected in parent strain C. jejuni 11168 by HILIC-MS and precursor ion scanning for fragment ions related to CMP (m ⁄ z 322). Fig. 2. NanoLC-MS ⁄ MS analysis of the tryptic digest of 11168 fla- gellin. (A) MS ⁄ MS spectrum of the doubly charged ion at m ⁄ z 1167.1 corresponding to the glycopeptide, T 203–222 , modified with a single glycan moiety. The amino acid sequence of this peptide is shown in the inset and the y-fragment ions arising from fragmenta- tion of the peptide bonds are indicated in the spectrum. This pep- tide is modified with either the 389 Da or the 390 Da sugar and the low m ⁄ z region of this spectrum is dominated by their oxonium ions at m ⁄ z 390.2 and 391.2 (underlined) and related degradation products. Loss of water molecules from the m ⁄ z 391.2 ion yields the strong fragment ions at m ⁄ z 373.2 and 355.2, respectively, whereas the ion at m ⁄ z 346.2 arises from the loss of CO 2 from the oxonium ion at m ⁄ z 390.2. The ion at m ⁄ z 1943.4 corresponds to the intact peptide ion (singly charged) having lost the glycan modifi- cation. (B) MS ⁄ MS spectrum of the doubly charged ion at m ⁄ z 1064.5 corresponding to the glycopeptide, T 463–479 , also modified with a single glycan moiety. In this instance, the peptide appears to be modified predominantly with the 389 Da glycan as its oxonium ion and the related degradation products are dominant. Regions of both spectra have been expanded to highlight some of the less abundant but informative fragment ions. Flagellin glycosylation in C. jejuni S. M. Logan et al. 1016 FEBS Journal 276 (2009) 1014–1023 ª 2009 The Authors Journal compilation ª 2009 FEBS nucleotides within the metabolome. However, to derive meaningful structural information on the novel CMP- sugars and reduce ambiguity, it was necessary to employ high resolution MS for subsequent experi- ments. Accurate mass measurements of I and II were performed on a Waters Q-ToF Premier mass spec- trometer (Waters Corp., Milford, MA, USA) and accurate masses of the protonated [M + H] + ions of I and II were revealed as 714.2222 and 713.2403 Da, respectively (Fig. 3A–C). A database search of the plausible molecular formulae satisfying these mass constraints and their isotopic patterns (see Table S1) suggested an empirical formula of C 25 H 41 N 5 O 17 P (the- oretical mass = 714.2235 Da, 1.8 p.p.m.) for I and C 25 H 42 N 6 O 16 P (theoretical mass = 713.2395 Da; 1.1 p.p.m.) for II. To obtain structural information on these novel metabolites, a series of tandem MS experiments were also performed using high resolution MS. In the nega- tive mode, MS ⁄ MS of the novel sugar-nucleotides revealed a major fragment ion at m ⁄ z 322, which is consistent with the expected m ⁄ z for [CMP-H] ) , sug- gesting that these novel metabolites are CMP-linked (data not shown). In the positive mode, MS ⁄ MS of I and II revealed major fragment ions at m ⁄ z 391.1723 and 390.1887, which correspond to the masses of the two novel carbohydrate moieties (Fig. 3D,E). To gener- ate structural information on these carbohydrate moie- ties, further tandem MS experiments were carried out to fragment the novel carbohydrates. As shown in Fig. 4A,B, the second generation product ion spectra for I and II revealed fragmentation patterns that are typically observed for nonulosonic acids [9,10,12–14]. For example, characteristic and consecutive neutral losses of water, ammonia and formic acid were observed in the second generation product ion spectra of both I and II. It is noteworthy that a prominent loss of the acetamidino functionality, CH 3 C(=NH)NH Fig. 3. Accurate mass measurements of unknown CMP-sugars detected in C. jejuni 11168. (A) Extracted ion chromatogram of m ⁄ z 714 (I) and 713 (II). (B) MS at 14.6 min showing the accurate mass of I. (C) MS at 17.9 min showing accurate mass of II. (D) Corresponding MS ⁄ MS spectrum of I. (E) Corresponding MS ⁄ MS spectrum of II. S. M. Logan et al. Flagellin glycosylation in C. jejuni FEBS Journal 276 (2009) 1014–1023 ª 2009 The Authors Journal compilation ª 2009 FEBS 1017 (neutral loss of 58 Da), was also observed in the second generation product ion spectrum of II (Fig. 4B). Based on our existing knowledge of Campylobacter flagellar glycans, it is highly plausible that II is the related ace- tamidino derivative of I because such a feature appears to be prevalent among the nonulosonic sugars in Cam- pylobacter (e.g. between Pse5Ac7Ac and Pse5Ac7Am [12] and Leg5Ac7Ac and Leg5Am7Ac [13]). Interest- ingly, fragment ions relating to nonulosonic acid were also apparent in the second generation product ion spectra of I and II (Fig. 4A,B) [9], suggesting that these CMP-sugars may be novel derivatives of a nonulosonic acid. Accordingly, the mass differences of 74.0374 Da observed between the oxonium ions of Pse5Ac7Ac (C 13 H 21 N 2 O 7 ; theoretical mass = 317.1349 Da) and I, and of 74.0378 Da observed between Pse5Ac7Am (C 13 H 22 N 3 O 6 , theoretical mass = 316.1509 Da) and II, indicate that the novel substituent differs from acetate by C 3 H 6 O 2 (theoretical mass = 74.0367 Da), thus hav- ing the overall formula C 5 H 9 O 3 . To unequivocally assign the structures of I and II, large-scale purifica- tions of the metabolites were achieved, as described previously [12,13] for NMR structural elucidation. Structural analysis of II by NMR spectroscopy By contrast to the earlier work on C. jejuni 81-176 and C. coli VC167, the novel CMP-linked metabolites I and II detected in C. jejuni 11168 were rather unstable compounds. MS analysis of the purified substrates revealed that approximately 20 lg of each metabolite was isolated but, upon their analysis by NMR, it was observed that degradation of the metabolites had occurred. This was particularly true for I where com- plete degradation of the metabolite appeared to have taken place, and therefore it was only possible to pur- sue the structural analysis of II by NMR spectroscopy. In addition to the problem of instability, it was also observed that the sample contained appreciable amounts of impurities, including glycerol, lactic acid and glyceric acid. The presence of these low molecular weight impurities presented a further challenge with respect to deducing the precise structure of II by NMR and attempts to remove these low molecular mass impurities by gel chromatography were unsuc- cessful. However, despite these complications, it was possible to deduce from the NMR spectra spin-systems of nonulosonic acid, ribose and cytosine (see Table S2). The coupling constants and chemical shifts of the nonulosonic acid residue agreed well with that observed in CMP-5-acetamido-7-ami- dino-3,5,7,9-tetradeoxy-l-glycero-a-l-manno-nonuloson- ic acid (CMP-Pse5Ac7Am), which had been detected in earlier metabolomic studies of the flagellin glycosyl- ation process in C. jejuni 81-176 [12]. Linkage of Pse to phosphate was also confirmed by the observation of H-P coupling on H-3ax (4 Hz). The spectra also con- tained the characteristic signal of an acetamidine group (C-1 at 167.4 p.p.m., H ⁄ C-2 at 2.24 ⁄ 19.5 p.p.m.) but no signals of the acetyl group were observed, suggest- ing that one of the amino groups of Pse was acylated by a novel acyl group. The NMR spectra also con- tained signals of two methyl groups, which gave het- eronuclear multiple bond correlations (HMBC) with the signals of the CH and CH 2 groups. Two latter sig- nals correlated with each other in the COSY spectrum, but nothing else. These data, taking into account posi- tion of 13 C signals of these groups (see Table S2) cor- responded to 2,3-di-O -methyl-glycerate. The COOH group signal was not observed in HMBC due to its presence in concentrations below the limit of detection; thus, the linkage of dimethylglycerate to the nonulo- sonic acid could not be directly confirmed. However, Fig. 4. Second generation product ion spectrum of (A) I and (B) II. Broken arrows indicate the possible neutral loss of the 2,3-di-O- methyl-glyceramide (C 5 H 11 NO 3 ). Flagellin glycosylation in C. jejuni S. M. Logan et al. 1018 FEBS Journal 276 (2009) 1014–1023 ª 2009 The Authors Journal compilation ª 2009 FEBS given that the exact theoretical mass of CMP-Pse5acy- l7Ac (where acyl is 2,3-di-O-methylglycerate) (i.e. C 25 H 42 N 6 O 16 P 1 ) is 713.2395 Da, this proposed deriva- tive shows a near perfect agreement with the experi- mentally observed value of 713.2403 Da (1.1 p.p.m. error). The presence of a dimethylglycerate substituent would also be consistent with earlier predictions from the second generation product ion experiments on II of a novel modification with a molecular formula of C 5 H 9 O 3 , and, as indicated in the second generation product ion spectra of I and II (Fig. 4A,B), this could be observed as the neutral loss of the 2,3-di-O-methyl- glyceramide (C 5 H 11 NO 3 ). The respective position of the amidine and dimethyl- glycerate on N-5 and N-7 of the Pse could not be experimentally confirmed. The HMBC correlations with C-1 of acyl groups were not observed due to the low concentration of the purified metabolite II.A comparison of 13 C chemical shifts of II with model compounds bearing either two acetyl groups (Pse5A- c7Ac) or one acetyl group and one amidino group at N-7 (Pse5Ac7Am) showed good agreement of the 7-amidino derivative with the data for the analyzed compound (see Table S2). The 7-N-acetyl derivative had C-7 signal shifted more than 4 p.p.m. upfield com- pared to that of the 7-amidino derivative. This differ- ence is characteristic for the amidine substitution and has been reported also with other sugars [16]. Thus, II is likely to be substituted with the dimethylglycerate group at N-5 and with amidine at N-7. Metabolomic analysis of pseB and pseC Pse biosynthetic genes Earlier studies on Pse biosynthesis in Campylobacter identified key roles for pseB and pseC in the biosyn- thetic process [12,17,18] and the insertional inactiva- tion of these two genes had led to the disappearance of CMP-Pse5Ac7Ac and CMP-Pse5Ac7Am from the metabolome of C. jejuni 81-176 [12,17,18]. The analysis of I and II by MS and NMR analyses in the present study strongly suggests that these two CMP-sugars are novel modifications of Pse. However, considering the complexity of the flagellin glycosylation locus of C. jejuni 11168 and the ability of this strain of Cam- pylobacter to synthesize both Pse and legionaminic acid sugars, it would be invaluable to obtain support- ing biological data to confirm these CMP-sugars as novel derivatives of Pse. Given that pseB and pseC are exclusively involved in Pse5Ac7Ac biosynthesis, there is the potential to employ metabolomics to explore the sugar-nucleotide complement of isogenic mutants pseB and pseC of strain 11168, and confirm whether I and II are indeed novel modifications of Pse. Accordingly, the metabolomes of isogenic mutants pseB (see Fig. S1) and pseC (data not shown) of C. jejuni 11168 were prepared and probed for CMP-sugars using the HILIC-MS and the precursor ion scanning method. As expected, the CMP-linked precursors of Pse5Ac7Ac and Pse5Ac7Am were absent from the metabolomes of both pseB and pseC but, in addition, the novel CMP- sugars were also no longer present, confirming that I and II are synthesized through the Pse biosynthetic pathway. It is noteworthy that the biosynthesis of the CMP-precursors of the legionaminic acid sugars was not affected by the insertional inactivation of pseB and pseC, thereby providing further evidence that I and II are the dimethylglyceric acid modifica- tions of Pse and its related acetamidino derivative, respectively. The absolute configuration of I or II was not determined. However, the relative configura- tion of II was determined by NMR. Based on the structural data obtained by MS and metabolomic screening of isogenic mutants pseB and pseC, I was identified tentatively as CMP-7-acetimidoylamino- 5-(2,3-di-O-methylglyceroyl)amino-3,5,7,9-tetradeoxy-l- glycero-a-l -manno-nonulosonic acid, and II was determined to be CMP-7-acetamido-5-(2,3-di- O- methylglyceroyl)amino-3,5,7,9-tetradeoxy-l-glycero-a- l-manno-nonulosonic acid (Fig. 5). Fig. 5. Proposed structures of I and II. S. M. Logan et al. Flagellin glycosylation in C. jejuni FEBS Journal 276 (2009) 1014–1023 ª 2009 The Authors Journal compilation ª 2009 FEBS 1019 Discussion Metabolomics has provided a unique opportunity to highlight subtle differences in the nature of the glyco- syl moieties that decorate the flagellin of different Campylobacter strains through structural elucidation of their corresponding biosynthetic intermediates. Ear- lier studies of C. coli VC167 had revealed the potential for Campylobacter to synthesize a variety of legionami- nic acid sugars, and this capability was again utilized in the present study to investigate C. jejuni 11168. In addition to previously well characterized glycosyl mod- ifications, two novel carbohydrate modifications were also detected in the metabolome of C. jejuni 11168 as their corresponding CMP-linked intermediates. Exten- sive structural analysis of these CMP-sugars using a combination of high resolution MS and NMR spec- troscopy identified these metabolites as the dimethyl- glyceric acid derivatives of Pse and the related acetamidino derivative. It is noteworthy that the use of high resolution MS in the present study was instru- mental in elucidating the structures of the carbohy- drate moieties. This was particularly true of I, where complete degradation of the metabolite had occurred during NMR analysis and structural information could only be gained using high resolution MS. Although the absolute configuration of the novel glycans could not be determined, the metabolomic analysis of selected genes known to have an exclusive role in Pse biosyn- thesis clearly demonstrated a role for these genes in the biosynthesis of the two novel metabolites, thereby confirming them as derivatives of Pse. This is the first report of dimethylglyceric acid deriv- atives of Pse in Campylobacter and further illustrates the considerable capacity of Campylobacter to synthe- size a large number of nonulosonate sugar derivatives. Although the precise biological role of these novel derivatives has yet to be defined, a recent study dem- onstrated that the legionaminic acid biosynthetic genes present in the Campylobacter flagellar glycosylation island are a genetic marker for a livestock associated clade [19]. In addition, legionaminic acid modifications found on the flagellin of 11168 are involved in the ability of this strain to persist in the gastrointestinal tract of chickens (S. L. Howard, A. Jagannathan, E. C. Soo, J. P. M. Hui, A. J. Aubry, I. Ahmed, A. Karlyshev, J. F. Kelly, M. A. Jones, M. P. Stevens, S. M. Logan and B. W. Wren, unpublished results). By contrast, flagellins from C. jejuni 81-176 are glyco- sylated with only Pse derivatives [9]. This strain was originally isolated from a patient during an outbreak of campylobacteriosis [20] and is highly pathogenic in monkeys and in human trials [21–23]. The precise role of the Pse5Ac7Ac and Pse5Ac7Am glycans remains to be established, but they have been shown to play a key role in virulence of this strain [24]. The biological role of the two novel flagellar glycans characterized in the present study can now also be explored. Campylobacter is not unique in attaching novel nonulosonate sugar derivatives to its flagellin. Flagel- lins from a strain of Campylobacter botulinum,a Gram-positive spore forming anaerobe, have also been shown to be glycosylated with a novel legionaminic acid derivative, 7-acetamido-5-(N-methyl-glutam-4-yl)- amino-3,5,7,9-tetradeoxy-d-glycero-a-d-galacto-nonulo- sonic acid (Leg5GluMe7Ac) [25], whereas other strains appear to produce related structures. It is not yet known whether these modifications also contribute to the colonization ability of C. botulinum isolates in distinct animal hosts. Experimental procedures Bacterial strains and growth conditions C. jejuni 11168 and isogenic mutants pseB and pseC were grown using the procedure as described previously [12]. Purification of flagellin Flagellin was purified as previously described [26], although the solubilization step in 1% SDS was eliminated and the crude pellet after ultracentrifugation was characterized directly by MS. LC-MS/MS analysis of flagellin Flagellin protein was digested overnight with trypsin (50– 200 lg; Promega, Madison, WI, USA) at a ratio of 30 : 1 (protein : enzyme, v ⁄ v) in 50 mm ammonium bicarbonate at 37 °C. Protein digests were analyzed by MS as previ- ously described [10]. Construction of C. jejuni 11168 pseB and pseC mutant strains To generate pseB(Cj1293)::cat and pseC(Cj1294)::cat mutants in C. jejuni 11168, a 4052 bp fragment (dcd-Cj1295) was amplified by PCR from chromosomal DNA using oligonucle- otides Pse1 (5¢-ATTTTACACTTTGACTAGGTTGAGC-3¢) and Pse2 (5¢-ATATTATGCCAAGATTTACAAGTGG-3¢). The product was inserted into the EcoRV site of plasmid PCRscript and the SmaI site of plasmid pUC19, resulting in plasmids PCRscript(pse) and pUC19(pse). A 1.1 kb chloram- Flagellin glycosylation in C. jejuni S. M. Logan et al. 1020 FEBS Journal 276 (2009) 1014–1023 ª 2009 The Authors Journal compilation ª 2009 FEBS phenicol-resistance cassette (cat) obtained from SmaI digested plasmid pRY109 [27] was inserted either into the unique BseRI (for pseB)orDraIII (for pseC) site, and subsequently treated with T4 DNA Polymerase, of PCRscript(pse) and pUC19(pse) to create the knockout plasmids PCR- script(pseB::cat) and pUC19(pseC::cat). Five micrograms of Escherichia coli DH5a derived gene knockout plasmid DNA carrying the cat gene in a nonpolar orientation, as verified by PCR analyses with primer Pse1 and cat-specific oligonucleo- tides ccatB (5¢-TTCTGAAAAAACGCCTACCTG-3¢) and ccatF (5¢-AATGTCCGCAAAGCCTAATC-3¢), was used to transform C. jejuni 11168 by electroporation, as described pre- viously [28]. Chloramphenicol-resistant transformants were characterized by PCR with oligonucleotides ccatF ⁄ 1295-2 (5¢-TGCATATTTAAGATATTGGCTATATCG-3¢) and ccatB ⁄ 1292-1 (5¢-AACACAAGATGATCGAACCATTTT GC-3¢) to confirm that the incoming plasmid DNA had inte- grated by a double cross-over event. Preparation of cell lysates Cell lysates of parent strain C. jejuni 11168 and isogenic mutants pseB and pseC were prepared and extraction of intracellular sugar-nucleotides from the cell lysates was achieved using ENVI-Carb (Supelco, Bellefonte, PA, USA) solid phase extraction cartridges, as described previously [12]. MS Cell lysates of parent strain C. jejuni 11168 and isogenic mutants pseB and pseC were probed for intracellular sugar- nucleotides using HILIC-MS and a precursor ion scanning method, as described previously [12]. The intracellular sugar-nucleotides were separated by HILIC on a TSKgel Amide80 column (inner diameter 250 · 4.6 mm; Tosoh Bio- science, Montgomeryville, PA, USA) using an Agilent 1100 Series LC system (Santa Clara, CA, USA) and detected by precursor ion scanning on a 4000 QTRAP hybrid triple quadrupole linear ion trap mass spectrometer (AB ⁄ MDS Sciex, Concord, ON, Canada). For large-scale purifications of the unknown intermediates, the flow from the LC system was split 2 : 8 v ⁄ v to the mass spectrometer and the fractions collected and pooled for subsequent structural analyses. For high resolution MS experiments, an Agilent 1100 Series LC system was coupled to a Q-ToF Premier hybrid quadrupole TOF mass spectrometer equipped with an Elec- trospray Ionization (ESI) LockSprayÔ modular source (Waters Corp.). Calibration was performed using the MS ⁄ MS fragment ions of [Glu 1 ]-Fibrinopeptide B (1 pmo- lÆlL )1 ; Sigma-Aldrich, St Louis, MO, USA) in the positive mode and a lock mass solution of leucine enkephelin (100 pgÆlL )1 ; Sigma-Aldrich). A typical mass accuracy of 2 p.p.m. or less was obtained. During data acquisition, the lock mass solution was infused continuously at a frequency of 10 : 1 (sample-to-reference ratio). Separations were achieved using the TSKgel Amide80 column and the same mobile phase as reported previously [12,13]. The MS data were acquired using the centroid mode. Tandem MS of the sugar nucleotide molecule was carried out using argon as collision gas with a collision energy of 18 eV. To obtain MS ⁄ MS of the sugar molecules, the cone voltage was increased to 50 V to promote in-source fragmentation and the resulting sugar oxonium ions were selected as precursor ions for tandem MS (collision ener- gy = 20 eV). All data acquisition was performed using masslynx, version 4.1 (Waters Corp.). Elemental compo- sition was performed using a mass tolerance of 10 p.p.m. and was sorted by i-FIT score assigned by masslynx based on the isotopic patterns of the target ions. The ele- ments used for searching were limited to C, H, N, O and P. NMR spectroscopy 1 H and 13 C NMR spectra were recorded using a Varian Inova 600 spectrometer (Varian, Palo Alto, CA, USA) with a cold probe in D 2 O (Cambridge Isotopes Laboratories Inc., Andover, MA, USA) solutions at 25 °C with acetone standard (2.23 p.p.m. for 1 H and 31.5 p.p.m. for 13 C) using standard COSY, TOCSY (mixing time 120 ms), ROESY (mixing time 200 ms), HSQC and HMBC (100 ms long- range transfer delay). Acknowledgements We would like to thank Dr C. Szymanski, University of Alberta, for providing pseB and pseC isogenic mutants of 11168 and Tom Devecseri, NRC-IBS, for his assistance in preparing the figures. References 1 Allos BM (2001) Campylobacter jejuni infections: update on emerging issues and trends. Clin Infect Dis 32, 1201– 1206. 2 Jacobs-Reitsma W, Lyhs U & Wagenaar J (2008) Campylobacter in the food supply. In Campylobacter (Nachamkin I, Szymanski CM & Blaser MJ, eds), pp. 627–644. ASM Press, Washington DC. 3 Allos BM (1998) Campylobacter jejuni infection as a cause of the Guillain–Barre syndrome. Infect Dis Clin North Am 12, 173–184. 4 Lecuit M, Abachin E, Martin A, Poyart C, Pochart P, Suarez F, Bengoufa D, Feuillard J, Lavergne A, Gor- don JI et al. (2004) Immunoproliferative small intestinal disease associated with Campylobacter jejuni. N Engl J Med 350, 239–248. S. M. Logan et al. Flagellin glycosylation in C. jejuni FEBS Journal 276 (2009) 1014–1023 ª 2009 The Authors Journal compilation ª 2009 FEBS 1021 5 Guerry P, Doig P, Alm RA, Burr DH, Kinsella N & Trust TJ (1996) Identification and characterization of genes required for post-translational modification of Campylobacter coli VC167 flagellin. Mol Microbiol 19, 369–378. 6 Alksne LE (2002) Virulence as a target for antimicro- bial chemotherapy. Expert Opin Investig Drugs 11, 1149–1159. 7 Parkhill J, Wren BW, Mungall K, Ketley JM, Chur- cher C, Basham D, Chillingworth T, Davies RM, Feltwell T, Holroyd S et al. (2000) The genome sequence of the food-borne pathogen Campylobacter jejuni reveals hypervariable sequences. Nature 403, 665–668. 8 Schirm M, Schoenhofen IC, Logan SM, Waldron KC & Thibault P (2005) Identification of unusual bacterial glycosylation by tandem mass spectrometry analyses of intact proteins. Anal Chem 77, 7774–7782. 9 Thibault P, Logan SM, Kelly JF, Brisson JR, Ewing CP, Trust TJ & Guerry P (2001) Identification of the carbohydrate moieties and glycosylation motifs in Cam- pylobacter jejuni flagellin. J Biol Chem 276, 34862– 34870. 10 Logan SM, Kelly JF, Thibault P, Ewing CP & Guerry P (2002) Structural heterogeneity of carbohydrate modi- fications affects serospecificity of Campylobacter flagel- lins. Mol Microbiol 46, 587–597. 11 Soo EC, Aubry AJ, Logan SM, Guerry P, Kelly JF, Young NM & Thibault P (2004) Selective detection and identification of sugar nucleotides by CE-electrospray- MS and its application to bacterial metabolomics. Anal Chem 76, 619–626. 12 McNally DJ, Hui JP, Aubry AJ, Mui KK, Guerry P, Brisson JR, Logan SM & Soo EC (2006) Functional characterization of the flagellar glycosylation locus in Campylobacter jejuni 81-176 using a focused metabolomics approach. J Biol Chem 281, 18489– 18498. 13 McNally DJ, Aubry AJ, Hui JP, Khieu NH, Whitfield D, Ewing CP, Guerry P, Brisson JR, Logan SM & Soo EC (2007) Targeted metabolomics analysis of Campylo- bacter coli VC167 reveals legionaminic acid derivatives as novel flagellar glycans. J Biol Chem 282, 14463– 14475. 14 Schirm M, Soo EC, Aubry AJ, Austin J, Thibault P & Logan SM (2003) Structural, genetic and functional characterization of the flagellin glycosylation process in Helicobacter pylori. Mol Microbiol 48, 1579–1592. 15 Schoenhofen IC, McNally DJ, Vinogradov E, Whitfield D, Young NM, Dick S, Wakarchuk WW, Brisson JR & Logan SM (2006) Functional characterization of dehy- dratase ⁄ aminotransferase pairs from Helicobacter and Campylobacter: enzymes distinguishing the pseudaminic acid and bacillosamine biosynthetic pathways. 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J Infect Dis 157, 472–479. 24 Guerry P, Ewing CP, Schirm M, Lorenzo M, Kelly J, Pattarini D, Majam G, Thibault P & Logan S (2006) Changes in flagellin glycosylation affect Campylobacter autoagglutination and virulence. Mol Microbiol 60, 299–311. 25 Twine SM, Paul CJ, Vinogradov E, McNally DJ, Brisson JR, Mullen JA, McMullin DR, Jarrell HC, Austin JW, Kelly JF et al. (2008) Flagellar glycosyla- tion in Clostridium botulinum. FEBS J 275, 4428– 4444. 26 Power ME, Guerry P, McCubbin WD, Kay CM & Trust TJ (1994) Structural and antigenic characteristics of Campylobacter coli FlaA flagellin. J Bacteriol 176 , 3303–3313. Flagellin glycosylation in C. jejuni S. M. Logan et al. 1022 FEBS Journal 276 (2009) 1014–1023 ª 2009 The Authors Journal compilation ª 2009 FEBS 27 Yao R, Alm RA, Trust TJ & Guerry P (1993) Con- struction of new Campylobacter cloning vectors and a new mutational cat cassette. Gene 130, 127–130. 28 Guerry P, Yao R, Alm RA, Burr DH & Trust TJ (1994) Systems of experimental genetics for Campylo- bacter species. Meth Enzymol 235, 474–481. Supporting information The following supplementary material is available: Fig. S1. Intracellular CMP-sugars detected in isogenic mutant pseB by HILIC-MS and precursor ion scan- ning for fragment ions related to CMP (m ⁄ z 322). Table S1. Elemental composition report for unknown CMP-sugars I and II based on accurate mass measure- ments carried out on a Waters Q-ToF Premier mass spectrometer. Table S2. NMR chemical shifts (p.p.m.) and coupling constants J (Hz) for II and model compounds CMP- Pse5Ac7Ac and CMP-Pse5Ac7Am. CMP 1 H signals at 6.12 ⁄ 8.01 p.p.m. This supplementary material can be found in the online version of this article. Please note: Wiley-Blackwell is not responsible for the content or functionality of any supplementary materials supplied by the authors. Any queries (other than missing material) should be directed to the corre- sponding author for the article. S. M. Logan et al. Flagellin glycosylation in C. jejuni FEBS Journal 276 (2009) 1014–1023 ª 2009 The Authors Journal compilation ª 2009 FEBS 1023 . Identification of novel carbohydrate modifications on Campylobacter jejuni 11168 flagellin using metabolomics-based approaches Susan M characterization of the carbohydrate modifications on C. jejuni 11168 flagellin using metabolomics-based approaches. Detected as their corresponding CMP-linked precursors,

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