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Expression and mutational analysis of the nucleoid-associated protein H-NS of Salmonella typhimurium 总被引:13,自引:0,他引:13
Jay C. D. Hinton Diogenes S. Santos Alexander Seirafi Christopher S. J. Hulton Graham D. Pavitt Christopher F. Higgins 《Molecular microbiology》1992,6(16):2327-2337
The H-NS (H1) protein is a major component of bacterial chromatin. Mutations in the hns (osmZ) gene encoding H-NS are highly pleiotropic, affecting the expression of many unrelated genes in an allele-specific manner. H-NS expression was found not to vary with growth phase or growth medium osmolarity. Additionally, 10 independent hns mutations were isolated and characterized. Five of these mutations were the result of an IS10 insertion, each generating a truncated polypeptide. The other five mutations were the same specific deletion of one amino acid, delta Ala46. The various hns mutations exhibited different phenotypes and influenced DNA topology to variable extents. Implications for the mechanism by which H-NS influences gene expression are discussed. 相似文献
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A prerequisite for Salmonella enterica to cause both intestinal and systemic disease is the direct injection of effector proteins into host intestinal epithelial cells via a type three secretion system (T3SS); the T3SS genes are carried on Salmonella pathogenicity island 1 (SPI1). These effector proteins induce inflammatory diarrhea and bacterial invasion. Expression of the SPI1 T3SS is tightly regulated in response to environmental signals through a variety of global regulatory systems. We have previously shown that three AraC-like regulators, HilD, HilC, and RtsA, act in a complex feed-forward regulatory loop to control the expression of the hilA gene, which encodes the direct regulator of the SPI1 structural genes. In this work, we characterize a major positive regulator of this system, the flagellar protein FliZ. Through genetic and biochemical analyses, we show that FliZ posttranslationally controls HilD to positively regulate hilA expression. This mechanism is independent of other flagellar components and is not mediated through the negative regulator HilE or through FliZ-mediated RpoS regulation. We demonstrate that FliZ controls HilD protein activity and not stability. FliZ regulates HilD in the absence of Lon protease, previously shown to degrade HilD. Indeed, it appears that FliZ, rather than HilD, is the most relevant target of Lon as it relates to SPI1 expression. Mutants lacking FliZ are significantly attenuated in their ability to colonize the intestine but are unaffected during systemic infection. The intestinal attenuation is partially dependent on SPI1, but FliZ has additional pleiotropic effects. 相似文献
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Abstract FlgM inhibits the flagella-specific sigma factor FliA and is involved in the mouse-virulence of Salmonella typhimurium . In recent experiments, we observed that: (i) a flgM gene that could function to negatively regulate flagella synthesis was present in a variety of salmonellae; and (ii) the flgM gene derived from Salmonella species that are not normally virulent in mice could complement the S. typhimurium flgM mutant for virulence. Our results suggest that a functional flgM , has been retained in most, and perhaps all, Salmonella species, regardless of the motility or virulence phenotype of the strain. 相似文献
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The pepM gene of Salmonella typhimurium codes for a methionine-specific aminopeptidase that removes N-terminal methionine residues from proteins. This gene was inactivated in vitro by the insertion of a DNA fragment coding for kanamycin resistance. The inactivated gene could not replace the wild-type chromosomal pepM gene unless another functional copy was present in the cell. The lethal effect of the pepM insertion was not a result of polarity on any gene downstream, nor was it affected by the presence or absence of other peptidases. 相似文献
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Boshnakov RKh Romanova IuM Zigangirova NA Gintsburg AL 《Molekuliarnaia genetika, mikrobiologiia i virusologiia》2001,(3):8-12
Differential gene expression in culturable and non-culturable forms of Salmonella typhimurium was studied by the molecular display method. Six fragments of differentially expressed gene cDNA, depending on culturable or non-culturable state of the cultures, were isolated, cloned, and sequenced. Identification of corresponding S. typhimurium differentially expressed genes was carried out by comparing the sequences of cDNA fragments with the bacterial genome data base. 相似文献
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Salmonella typhimurium causes enteric and systemic disease by invading the intestinal epithelium of the distal ileum, a process requiring the invasion genes of Salmonella pathogenicity island 1 (SPI-1). BarA, a sensor kinase postulated to interact with the response regulator SirA, is required for the expression of SPI-1 invasion genes. We found, however, that a barA null mutation had little effect on virulence using the mouse model for septicaemia. This confounding result led us to seek environmental signals present in the distal ileum that might supplant the need for BarA. We found that acetate restored the expression of invasion genes in the barA mutant, but had no effect on a sirA mutant. Acetate had its effect only at a pH that allowed its accumulation within the bacterial cytoplasm and not with the deletion of ackA and pta, the two genes required to produce acetyl-phosphate. These results suggest that the rising concentration of acetate in the distal ileum provides a signal for invasion gene expression by the production of acetyl-phosphate in the bacterial cytoplasm, a pathway that bypasses barA. We also found that a Delta(ackA-pta) mutation alone had no effect on virulence but, in combination with Delta(barA), it increased the oral LD50 24-fold. Thus, the combined loss of the BarA- and acetate-dependent pathways is required to reduce virulence. Two other short-chain fatty acids (SCFA), propionate and butyrate, present in high concentrations in the caecum and colon, had effects opposite to those of acetate: neither restored invasion gene expression in the barA mutant, and both, in fact, reduced expression in the wild-type strain. Further, a combination of SCFAs found in the distal ileum restored invasion gene expression in the barA mutant, whereas colonic conditions failed to do so and also reduced expression in the wild-type strain. These results suggest that the concentration and composition of SCFAs in the distal ileum provide a signal for productive infection by Salmonella, whereas those of the large intestine inhibit invasion. 相似文献