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Uropathogenic Escherichia coli (UPEC) is a major pathogen that causes urinary tract infection (UTI), a common bacterial infectious disease. This bacterium invades the urinary tract cells, where it aggregates, and subsequently forms multicellular colonies termed intracellular bacterial communities (IBCs). The motility of the bacteria plays a key role in the mechanism of virulence in the host bladder. Here, we show that CytR is a modulator of bacterial internalization and aggregation within the bladder epithelial cells sustained by CRP in UPEC. Mutational analyses and gel-shift assays indicated that CytR represses the expression of flhD, thereby encoding a master regulator for flagellar expression that is responsible for bacterial motility when CRP is present, whereas CRP is an activator of flhD expression. Thus, elevated flagellar expression was involved in promoted virulence in the cytR mutant. These combined observations suggest another regulatory layer of flagellar expression and the role of CytR in UPEC virulence.  相似文献   

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The gene function of the locus of enterocyte effacement (LEE) is essential for full virulence of enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli (EHEC). Strict control of LEE gene expression is mediated by the coordinated activities of several regulatory elements. We previously reported that the ClpX/ClpP protease positively controls LEE expression by down-regulating intracellular levels of GrlR, a negative regulator of LEE gene expression. We further revealed that the negative effect of GrlR on LEE expression was mediated through GrlA, a positive regulator of LEE expression. In this study, we found that the FliC protein, a major component of flagellar filament, was overproduced in clpXP mutant EHEC, as previously reported for Salmonella. We further found that FliC expression was reduced in a clpXP grlR double mutant. To determine the mediators of this phenotype, FliC protein levels in wild-type, grlR, grlA, and grlR grlA strains were compared. Steady-state levels of FliC protein were reduced only in the grlR mutant, suggesting that positive regulation of FliC expression by GrlR is mediated by GrlA. Correspondingly, cell motility was also reduced in the grlR mutant, but not in the grlA or grlR grlA mutant. Because overexpression of grlA from a multicopy plasmid strongly represses the FliC level, as well as cell motility, we conclude that GrlA acts as a negative regulator of flagellar-gene expression. The fact that an EHEC strain constitutively expressing FlhD/FlhC cannot adhere to HeLa cells leads us to hypothesize that GrlA-dependent repression of the flagellar regulon is important for efficient cell adhesion of EHEC to host cells.  相似文献   

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Heterogeneity in the expression of various bacterial genes has been shown to result in the presence of individuals with different phenotypes within clonal bacterial populations. The genes specifying motility and flagellar functions are coordinately regulated and form a complex regulon, the flagellar regulon. Complex interplay has recently been demonstrated in the regulation of flagellar and virulence gene expression in many bacterial pathogens. We show here that FliZ, a DNA-binding protein, plays a key role in the insect pathogen, Xenorhabdus nematophila, affecting not only hemolysin production and virulence in insects, but efficient swimming motility. RNA-Seq analysis identified FliZ as a global regulatory protein controlling the expression of 278 Xenorhabdus genes either directly or indirectly. FliZ is required for the efficient expression of all flagellar genes, probably through its positive feedback loop, which controls expression of the flhDC operon, the master regulator of the flagellar circuit. FliZ also up- or downregulates the expression of numerous genes encoding non-flagellar proteins potentially involved in key steps of the Xenorhabdus lifecycle. Single-cell analysis revealed the bimodal expression of six identified markers of the FliZ regulon during exponential growth of the bacterial population. In addition, a combination of fluorescence-activated cell sorting and RT-qPCR quantification showed that this bimodality generated a mixed population of cells either expressing (“ON state”) or not expressing (“OFF state”) FliZ-dependent genes. Moreover, studies of a bacterial population exposed to a graded series of FliZ concentrations showed that FliZ functioned as a rheostat, controlling the rate of transition between the “OFF” and “ON” states in individuals. FliZ thus plays a key role in cell fate decisions, by transiently creating individuals with different potentials for motility and host interactions.  相似文献   

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