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Virulence in Vibrio cholerae requires activation of toxT by two membrane-localized activators, TcpP and ToxR. We isolated 12 tcpP activation mutants that fell into two classes: class I mutants were inactive irrespective of the presence of ToxR, and class II mutants exhibited near wild-type activity when coexpressed with ToxR. Most class I mutants had lesions in the wing domain predicted by homology with the winged helix-turn-helix family of activators. Class I mutants bound promoter DNA poorly and were largely unable to interact with ToxR in a crosslinking assay, whereas class II mutants retained physical interaction with ToxR. One mutant constructed in vitro bound DNA poorly but nevertheless responded to ToxR by activating toxT and also maintained ToxR interaction. We propose that ToxR interaction, but not DNA binding, is essential for TcpP function and that the wing domain of TcpP enables contact with ToxR required for productive TcpP-RNA polymerase association.  相似文献   

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The ToxR protein is a transmembrane protein that regulates the expression of several virulence factors of Vibrio cholerae. Previous analysis of fusion proteins between ToxR and alkaline phosphatase (ToxR-PhoA) suggested that ToxR was active as a dimer. In order to determine whether dimerization of the ToxR periplasmic domain was essential for activity, this domain was replaced by monomeric and dimeric protein domains. Surprisingly, PhoA (dimeric), β-lactamase (monomeric, ToxR–Bla), or the leucine zipper of GCN4 (dimeric, ToxR-GCN4-M) could substitute functionally for the ToxR periplasmic domain. ToxR-GCN4 fusion proteins, in which the ToxR trans-membrane domain was eliminated (ToxR-GCN4-C), were inactive, but an additional fusion protein that contained a heterologous membrane-spanning domain retained activity. Strains containing each of these ToxR fusion proteins were analysed for in vivo colonization properties and response to in vitro growth conditions that are known to affect expression of the ToxR regulon. Strains containing ToxR-GCN4-M and ToxR-Bla responded like wild-type strains to in vitro growth conditions. In the infant-mouse colonization model, strains containing ToxR fusion proteins were all deficient in colonization relative to strains containing wild-type ToxR, and strains containing monomeric ToxR-Bla were most severely outcompeted. These results suggest that, under in vitro conditions, ToxR does not require a dimerized periplasmic domain, but that, under in vivo conditions, the correct conformation of the ToxR periplasmic domain may be more important for function.  相似文献   

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Vibrio cholerae O1 is a natural inhabitant of aquatic environments and causes the diarrheal disease, cholera. Two of its primary virulence regulators, TcpP and ToxR, are localized in the inner membrane. TcpP is encoded on the Vibrio Pathogenicity Island (VPI), a horizontally acquired mobile genetic element, and functions primarily in virulence gene regulation. TcpP has been shown to undergo regulated intramembrane proteolysis (RIP) in response to environmental conditions that are unfavorable for virulence gene expression. ToxR is encoded in the ancestral genome and is present in non-pathogenic strains of V. cholerae, indicating it has roles outside of the human host. In this study, we show that ToxR undergoes RIP in V. cholerae in response to nutrient limitation at alkaline pH, a condition that occurs during the stationary phase of growth. This process involves the site-2 protease RseP (YaeL), and is dependent upon the RpoE-mediated periplasmic stress response, as deletion mutants for the genes encoding these two proteins cannot proteolyze ToxR under nutrient limitation at alkaline pH. We determined that the loss of ToxR, genetically or by proteolysis, is associated with entry of V. cholerae into a dormant state in which the bacterium is normally found in the aquatic environment called viable but nonculturable (VBNC). Strains that can proteolyze ToxR, or do not encode it, lose culturability, experience a change in morphology associated with cells in VBNC, yet remain viable under nutrient limitation at alkaline pH. On the other hand, mutant strains that cannot proteolyze ToxR remain culturable and maintain the morphology of cells in an active state of growth. Overall, our findings provide a link between the proteolysis of a virulence regulator and the entry of a pathogen into an environmentally persistent state.  相似文献   

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The evolution of the genome of the pathogenic agent of the seventh cholera pandemia Vibrio cholerae eltor biovariant was thought to occur by acquiring not only structural genes of virulence but also regulatory systems as a result of horizontal transfer events. The polymerase chain reaction revealed the presence of the following regulatory genes that control the virulence gene expression in the chromosome of pre-pandemic and pandemic strains of cholera vibrios eltor: toxR, toxT, tcpP, tcpH, luxS, luxO, crp, vicH, pepA. The avirulent V. cholerae strain ATCC14033 isolated in 1910 (hypothetical predecessor of the cholera eltor agent) was shown to be lacking the regulatory genes toxT, tcpP, tcpHlocalized in the pathogenicity island VPI-1, and to be capable of realizing positive control over the expression of the virulence genes involved in the ToxR regulon. The virulent strains isolated from cholera patients during the local cholera outbreak in Indonesia in 1937 did not differ from the strains that caused cholera eltor pandemic in 1961. The strains had identical content of the regulatory genes tested. Only one strain of the four isolates studied contained no tcpPgene. Two key regulatory genes, toxR and toxT, were sequenced in all the isolates. The toxR nucleotide sequence of three pre-pandemic strains was shown to be indistinguishable from that of the pandemic isolates. On the other hand, the clinical strain MAK757 isolated prior to the emergence of the epidemic demonstrated an altered nucleotide sequence in its toxR gene. Experiments with the intra-intestinal challenge of suckling rabbits were indicative of similar virulence levels for the pre-pandemic and pandemic clinical strains. These results may serve as the evidence of the in vivo activity of the pre-pandemic strains of the toxT, tcpH, and tcpP positive regulatory genes that acquired in V. cholerae during the evolutionary process.  相似文献   

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