Phase variation of gonococcal pili by frameshift mutation in pilC, a novel gene for pilus assembly.

Pili prepared from Neisseria gonorrhoeae contain minor amounts of a 110 kd outer membrane protein denoted PilC. The corresponding gene exists in two copies, pilC1 and pilC2, in most strains of N.gonorrhoeae. In the piliated strain MS11(P+), only one of the genes, pilC2, was expressed. Inactivation of pilC2 by a mTnCm insertion resulted in a nonpiliated phenotype, while a mTnCm insertion in pilC1 had no effect on piliation. Expression of pilC was found to be controlled at the translational level by frameshift mutations in a run of G residues positioned in the region encoding the signal peptide. Nonpilated (P‐), pilin expressing colony variants that did not express detectable levels of PilC were selected; all P+ backswitchers from these P‐, PilC‐ clones were found to be PilC+. The structural gene for pilin, pilE, was sequenced and found to be identical in one P‐, PilC‐ and P+, PilC+ pair. Most PilC‐ cells were completely bald whereas the PilC+ backswitcher had 10–40 pili per cell. Thus, a turn ON and turn OFF in the expression of PilC results in gonococcal pili phase variation. These results suggest that PilC is required for pilus assembly and/or translocation across the gonococcal outer membrane.