Jm. Guthmiller et al., MUTATIONAL ANALYSIS OF THE PUTATIVE LEUKOTOXIN TRANSPORT GENES IN ACTINOBACILLUS-ACTINOMYCETEMCOMITANS, Microbial pathogenesis, 18(5), 1995, pp. 307-321
The periodontal pathogen, Actinobacillus actinomycetemcomitans, produc
es leukotoxin, a protein that specifically lyses host defense cells. T
he leukotoxin is similar in sequence and operon organization to the Es
cherichia coli alpha-hemolysin and other members of the RTX family of
toxins. However, unlike the other RTX toxins, the A. actinomycetemcomi
tans leukotoxin is not secreted from the cell and instead remains asso
ciated with the outer membrane. Nonetheless, the A. actinomycetemcomit
ans lkt operon contains two genes, lktB and lktD, that appear analagou
s to the toxin localization genes found In the other Gram-negative bac
teria. Thus, to determine the roles of these putative transport genes
in A. actinomycetemcomitans, we have used insertional mutagenesis to g
enerate mutant strains lacking functional LktB and/or LktD. When eithe
r lktD or both lktB and lktD were inactivated, the level of detectable
leukotoxin protein in the cell decreased significantly. However, the
lktB and lktD mutations had no effect on the levels of leukotoxin RNA.
Thus, the lack of LktB and LktD proteins must affect LktA synthesis p
ost-transcriptionally. It is proposed that this is an indirect effect
of leukotoxin mislocalization in lkfB(-) and lktD(-) mutants. Finally,
analysis of the mutants revealed that LktB and LktD are not essential
for the formation of extracellular membrane vesicles in A. actinomyce
temcomitans.