The methylation of ε-amino groups in protein lysine residues is an important posttranslational modification in eukaryotes. This modification plays a pivotal role in the regulation of diverse biological processes, including epigenetics, transcriptional control, and cellular signaling. Recent research has begun to reveal the potential role of methylation in modulating bacterial immune evasion and adherence to host cells. In this study, we analyzed the cell surface proteins of the toluene-degrading bacterium Acinetobacter sp. Tol 5 by label-free liquid chromatography‒mass spectrometry and found multiple lysine methylation in its trimeric autotransporter adhesin (TAA), AtaA. Over 130 lysine residues of AtaA, consisting of 3,630 amino acids and containing 234 lysine residues, were methylated. We identified that the outer membrane protein lysine methyltransferase (OM PKMT) of Tol 5, KmtA, specifically methylates the lysine residues of AtaA. In the KmtA-deficient mutant, most lysine methylations on AtaA were absent, indicating that KmtA is responsible for the methylation of multiple lysine residues throughout AtaA. Bioinformatic analysis revealed that the OM PKMT genes were widely distributed among Gram-negative bacteria, including pathogens with TAAs that promote infectivity, such as Burkholderia mallei and Haemophilus influenzae. Although KmtA has sequence similarities to the OM PKMTs of Rickettsia involved in infectivity, KmtA-like PKMTs formed a distinct cluster from those of the Rickettsia type according to the clustering analysis, suggesting that they are new types of OM PKMTs. Furthermore, the deletion of Tol 5 KmtA led to an increase in AtaA on the cell surface and enhanced bacterial adhesion, resulting in slower growth.
Importance: Lysine methylation has been underexplored in prokaryotes, and information on it is limited to some pathogens. Our finding is the second case of multiple lysine methylation of bacterial outer membrane (OM) proteins, following that of OmpB of Rickettsia. The newly found target of methylation, AtaA, a trimeric autotransporter adhesin family protein of Acinetobacter sp. Tol 5 isolated from activated sludge, extends our understanding of OM protein methylation to non-pathogenic environmental strains. The newly identified enzyme KmtA shows higher specificity than rickettsial lysin methylases, protein lysine methyltransferases, and methylates more lysine residues of the target, which raises interest in the mechanism underlying its biological specificity. The widespread presence of KmtA-like PKMTs throughout Gram-negative bacteria suggests that lysine methylation functions more extensively in bacterial physiology than previously recognized.
Keywords: bacterial adhesion; posttranslational modification; protein lysine methylation; trimeric autotransporter adhesin.