A Clostridium difficile alanine racemase affects spore germination and accommodates serine as a substrate
- ↵1 To whom correspondence should be addressed: Dept. of Biology, Texas A&M University, 3258 TAMU, College Station, TX 77843. Tel.: 979-845-6299; Fax: 979-845-2891; E-mail: jsorg{at}bio.tamu.edu.
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Edited by Chris Whitfield
Abstract
Clostridium difficile has become one of the most common bacterial pathogens in hospital-acquired infections in the United States. Although C. difficile is strictly anaerobic, it survives in aerobic environments and transmits between hosts via spores. C. difficile spore germination is triggered in response to certain bile acids and glycine. Although glycine is the most effective co-germinant, other amino acids can substitute with varying efficiencies. Of these, l-alanine is an effective co-germinant and is also a germinant for most bacterial spores. Many endospore-forming bacteria embed alanine racemases into their spore coats, and these enzymes are thought to convert the l-alanine germinant into d-alanine, a spore germination inhibitor. Although the C. difficile Alr2 racemase is the sixth most highly expressed gene during C. difficile spore formation, a previous study reported that Alr2 has little to no role in germination of C. difficile spores in rich medium. Here, we hypothesized that Alr2 could affect C. difficile l-alanine-induced spore germination in a defined medium. We found that alr2 mutant spores more readily germinate in response to l-alanine as a co-germinant. Surprisingly, d-alanine also functioned as a co-germinant. Moreover, we found that Alr2 could interconvert l- and d-serine and that Alr2 bound to l- and d-serine with ∼2-fold weaker affinity to that of l- and d-alanine. Finally, we demonstrate that l- and d-serine are also co-germinants for C. difficile spores. These results suggest that C. difficile spores can respond to a diverse set of amino acid co-germinants and reveal that Alr2 can accommodate serine as a substrate.
- bacteria
- bacterial genetics
- bacterial pathogenesis
- bacterial signal transduction
- microbiology
- physiology
- clostridium difficile
- germination
- racemase
- spore
Footnotes
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This work was supported by awards 5R01AI116895 and 1U01AI124290 from the NIAID, National Institutes of Health (to J. A. S.) The authors declare that they have no conflicts of interest with the contents of this article. The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Institutes of Health.
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This article contains supplemental Figs. S1–S4.
- Received April 17, 2017.
- Revision received May 7, 2017.
- © 2017 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.











