Cargando…

Hyperphosphorylation of the Group A Streptococcal Control of Virulence Regulator Increases Promoter Occupancy Specifically at Virulence Factor-Encoding Genes

The control of virulence two-component gene regulatory system (CovRS) is critical to the pathogenesis of many medically important streptococci. In emm1 group A streptococci (GAS), CovR directly binds the promoters of numerous GAS virulence factor-encoding genes. Elimination of CovS phosphatase activ...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Horstmann, Nicola, Tran, Chau Nguyen, Flores, Anthony R., Shelburne, Samuel A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society for Microbiology 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10294628/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37289078
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/jb.00118-23
_version_ 1785063232375881728
author Horstmann, Nicola
Tran, Chau Nguyen
Flores, Anthony R.
Shelburne, Samuel A.
author_facet Horstmann, Nicola
Tran, Chau Nguyen
Flores, Anthony R.
Shelburne, Samuel A.
author_sort Horstmann, Nicola
collection PubMed
description The control of virulence two-component gene regulatory system (CovRS) is critical to the pathogenesis of many medically important streptococci. In emm1 group A streptococci (GAS), CovR directly binds the promoters of numerous GAS virulence factor-encoding genes. Elimination of CovS phosphatase activity increases CovR phosphorylation (CovR~P) levels and abrogates GAS virulence. Given the emm type-specific diversity of CovRS function, in this study we used chromatin immunoprecipitation sequencing (ChIP-seq) to define global CovR DNA occupancy in the wild-type emm3 strain MGAS10870 (medium CovR~P) and its CovS phosphatase-negative derivative 10870-CovS-T284A (high CovR~P). In the wild-type emm3 strain, 89% of the previously identified emm1 CovR binding sites present in the emm3 genome were also enriched; additionally, we ascertained unique CovR binding, primarily to genes in mobile genetic elements and other sites of interstrain chromosomal differences. Elimination of CovS phosphatase activity specifically increased CovR occupancy at the promoters of a broad array of CovR repressed virulence factor-encoding genes, including those encoding the key GAS regulator Mga and M protein. However, a limited number of promoters had augmented enrichment at low CovR~P levels. Differential motif searches using sequences enriched at high versus low CovR~P levels revealed two distinct binding patterns. At high CovR~P, a pseudopalindromic AT-rich consensus sequence (WTWTTATAAWAAAAWNATDA) consistent with CovR binding as a dimer was determined. Conversely, sequences specifically enriched at low CovR~P contained isolated ATTARA motifs suggesting an interaction with a monomer. These data extend understanding of global CovR DNA occupancy beyond emm1 GAS and provide a mechanism for previous observations regarding hypovirulence induced by CovS phosphatase abrogation. IMPORTANCE Given its key role in pathogenesis of Gram-positive bacteria, CovR is one of the most important members of the OmpR/PhoB family of transcriptional regulators. Herein we extend recent GAS CovR global binding analyses done in emm1 to a non-emm1 strain, which is important considering the known inter-emm-type heterogeneity in GAS CovRS function. Our data provide mechanistic understanding for variation in CovRS function between emm types and the profound hypovirulence of CovS phosphatase-negative strains in addition to indicating differential targeting by phosphorylated and nonphosphorylated CovR isoforms at specific CovR binding sites. These findings advance knowledge regarding how a key bacterial virulence regulator impacts pathogenesis and add to the growing appreciation of the function of nonphosphorylated OmpR/PhoB family members.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-10294628
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2023
publisher American Society for Microbiology
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-102946282023-06-28 Hyperphosphorylation of the Group A Streptococcal Control of Virulence Regulator Increases Promoter Occupancy Specifically at Virulence Factor-Encoding Genes Horstmann, Nicola Tran, Chau Nguyen Flores, Anthony R. Shelburne, Samuel A. J Bacteriol Research Article The control of virulence two-component gene regulatory system (CovRS) is critical to the pathogenesis of many medically important streptococci. In emm1 group A streptococci (GAS), CovR directly binds the promoters of numerous GAS virulence factor-encoding genes. Elimination of CovS phosphatase activity increases CovR phosphorylation (CovR~P) levels and abrogates GAS virulence. Given the emm type-specific diversity of CovRS function, in this study we used chromatin immunoprecipitation sequencing (ChIP-seq) to define global CovR DNA occupancy in the wild-type emm3 strain MGAS10870 (medium CovR~P) and its CovS phosphatase-negative derivative 10870-CovS-T284A (high CovR~P). In the wild-type emm3 strain, 89% of the previously identified emm1 CovR binding sites present in the emm3 genome were also enriched; additionally, we ascertained unique CovR binding, primarily to genes in mobile genetic elements and other sites of interstrain chromosomal differences. Elimination of CovS phosphatase activity specifically increased CovR occupancy at the promoters of a broad array of CovR repressed virulence factor-encoding genes, including those encoding the key GAS regulator Mga and M protein. However, a limited number of promoters had augmented enrichment at low CovR~P levels. Differential motif searches using sequences enriched at high versus low CovR~P levels revealed two distinct binding patterns. At high CovR~P, a pseudopalindromic AT-rich consensus sequence (WTWTTATAAWAAAAWNATDA) consistent with CovR binding as a dimer was determined. Conversely, sequences specifically enriched at low CovR~P contained isolated ATTARA motifs suggesting an interaction with a monomer. These data extend understanding of global CovR DNA occupancy beyond emm1 GAS and provide a mechanism for previous observations regarding hypovirulence induced by CovS phosphatase abrogation. IMPORTANCE Given its key role in pathogenesis of Gram-positive bacteria, CovR is one of the most important members of the OmpR/PhoB family of transcriptional regulators. Herein we extend recent GAS CovR global binding analyses done in emm1 to a non-emm1 strain, which is important considering the known inter-emm-type heterogeneity in GAS CovRS function. Our data provide mechanistic understanding for variation in CovRS function between emm types and the profound hypovirulence of CovS phosphatase-negative strains in addition to indicating differential targeting by phosphorylated and nonphosphorylated CovR isoforms at specific CovR binding sites. These findings advance knowledge regarding how a key bacterial virulence regulator impacts pathogenesis and add to the growing appreciation of the function of nonphosphorylated OmpR/PhoB family members. American Society for Microbiology 2023-06-08 /pmc/articles/PMC10294628/ /pubmed/37289078 http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/jb.00118-23 Text en Copyright © 2023 Horstmann et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) .
spellingShingle Research Article
Horstmann, Nicola
Tran, Chau Nguyen
Flores, Anthony R.
Shelburne, Samuel A.
Hyperphosphorylation of the Group A Streptococcal Control of Virulence Regulator Increases Promoter Occupancy Specifically at Virulence Factor-Encoding Genes
title Hyperphosphorylation of the Group A Streptococcal Control of Virulence Regulator Increases Promoter Occupancy Specifically at Virulence Factor-Encoding Genes
title_full Hyperphosphorylation of the Group A Streptococcal Control of Virulence Regulator Increases Promoter Occupancy Specifically at Virulence Factor-Encoding Genes
title_fullStr Hyperphosphorylation of the Group A Streptococcal Control of Virulence Regulator Increases Promoter Occupancy Specifically at Virulence Factor-Encoding Genes
title_full_unstemmed Hyperphosphorylation of the Group A Streptococcal Control of Virulence Regulator Increases Promoter Occupancy Specifically at Virulence Factor-Encoding Genes
title_short Hyperphosphorylation of the Group A Streptococcal Control of Virulence Regulator Increases Promoter Occupancy Specifically at Virulence Factor-Encoding Genes
title_sort hyperphosphorylation of the group a streptococcal control of virulence regulator increases promoter occupancy specifically at virulence factor-encoding genes
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10294628/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37289078
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/jb.00118-23
work_keys_str_mv AT horstmannnicola hyperphosphorylationofthegroupastreptococcalcontrolofvirulenceregulatorincreasespromoteroccupancyspecificallyatvirulencefactorencodinggenes
AT tranchaunguyen hyperphosphorylationofthegroupastreptococcalcontrolofvirulenceregulatorincreasespromoteroccupancyspecificallyatvirulencefactorencodinggenes
AT floresanthonyr hyperphosphorylationofthegroupastreptococcalcontrolofvirulenceregulatorincreasespromoteroccupancyspecificallyatvirulencefactorencodinggenes
AT shelburnesamuela hyperphosphorylationofthegroupastreptococcalcontrolofvirulenceregulatorincreasespromoteroccupancyspecificallyatvirulencefactorencodinggenes