4.4 Article

Motility and Flagellar Glycosylation in Clostridium difficile

Journal

JOURNAL OF BACTERIOLOGY
Volume 191, Issue 22, Pages 7050-7062

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/JB.00861-09

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Funding

  1. St. Boniface General Hospital, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada [CM-26, 06CD130, CM-56]
  2. University of Sherbrooke, Quebec, Canada [M46846, M23257, M9349, M7465]
  3. LSHTM, United Kingdom [630, BI-1, BI-7]
  4. Sir Mortimer B. Davis Jewish General Hospital, Montreal, Quebec, Canada [QCD32g58]

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In this study, intact flagellin proteins were purified from strains of Clostridium difficile and analyzed using quadrupole time of flight and linear ion trap mass spectrometers. Top-down studies showed the flagellin proteins to have a mass greater than that predicted from the corresponding gene sequence. These top-down studies revealed marker ions characteristic of glycan modifications. Additionally, diversity in the observed masses of glycan modifications was seen between strains. Electron transfer dissociation mass spectrometry was used to demonstrate that the glycan was attached to the flagellin protein backbone in O linkage via a HexNAc residue in all strains examined. Bioinformatic analysis of C. difficile genomes revealed diversity with respect to glycan biosynthesis gene content within the flagellar biosynthesis locus, likely reflected by the observed flagellar glycan diversity. In C. difficile strain 630, insertional inactivation of a glycosyltransferase gene (CD0240) present in all sequenced genomes resulted in an inability to produce flagellar filaments at the cell surface and only minor amounts of unmodified flagellin protein.

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