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Functional Analysis of the Quorum-Sensing Streptococcal Invasion Locus (sil)

Group A streptococcus (GAS) causes a wide variety of human diseases, and at the same time, GAS can also circulate without producing symptoms, similar to its close commensal relative, group G streptococcus (GGS). We previously identified, by transposon-tagged mutagenesis, the streptococcal invasion l...

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Autores principales: Belotserkovsky, Ilia, Baruch, Moshe, Peer, Asaf, Dov, Eran, Ravins, Miriam, Mishalian, Inbal, Persky, Merav, Smith, Yoav, Hanski, Emanuel
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2766830/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19893632
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1000651
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author Belotserkovsky, Ilia
Baruch, Moshe
Peer, Asaf
Dov, Eran
Ravins, Miriam
Mishalian, Inbal
Persky, Merav
Smith, Yoav
Hanski, Emanuel
author_facet Belotserkovsky, Ilia
Baruch, Moshe
Peer, Asaf
Dov, Eran
Ravins, Miriam
Mishalian, Inbal
Persky, Merav
Smith, Yoav
Hanski, Emanuel
author_sort Belotserkovsky, Ilia
collection PubMed
description Group A streptococcus (GAS) causes a wide variety of human diseases, and at the same time, GAS can also circulate without producing symptoms, similar to its close commensal relative, group G streptococcus (GGS). We previously identified, by transposon-tagged mutagenesis, the streptococcal invasion locus (sil). sil is a quorum-sensing regulated locus which is activated by the autoinducer peptide SilCR through the two-component system SilA-SilB. Here we characterize the DNA promoter region necessary for SilA-mediated activation. This site is composed of two direct repeats of 10 bp, separated by a spacer of 11 bp. Fusion of this site to gfp allowed us to systematically introduce single-base substitutions in the repeats region and to assess the relative contribution of various positions to promoter strength. We then developed an algorithm giving different weights to these positions, and performed a chromosome-wide bioinformatics search which was validated by transcriptome analysis. We identified 13 genes, mostly bacteriocin related, that are directly under the control of SilA. Having developed the ability to quantify SilCR signaling via GFP accumulation prompted us to search for GAS and GGS strains that sense and produce SilCR. While the majority of GAS strains lost sil, all GGS strains examined still possess the locus and ∼63% are able to respond to exogenously added SilCR. By triggering the autoinduction circle using a minute concentration of synthetic SilCR, we identified GAS and GGS strains that are capable of sensing and naturally producing SilCR, and showed that SilCR can be sensed across these streptococci species. These findings suggest that sil may be involved in colonization and establishment of commensal host-bacterial relationships.
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spelling pubmed-27668302009-11-06 Functional Analysis of the Quorum-Sensing Streptococcal Invasion Locus (sil) Belotserkovsky, Ilia Baruch, Moshe Peer, Asaf Dov, Eran Ravins, Miriam Mishalian, Inbal Persky, Merav Smith, Yoav Hanski, Emanuel PLoS Pathog Research Article Group A streptococcus (GAS) causes a wide variety of human diseases, and at the same time, GAS can also circulate without producing symptoms, similar to its close commensal relative, group G streptococcus (GGS). We previously identified, by transposon-tagged mutagenesis, the streptococcal invasion locus (sil). sil is a quorum-sensing regulated locus which is activated by the autoinducer peptide SilCR through the two-component system SilA-SilB. Here we characterize the DNA promoter region necessary for SilA-mediated activation. This site is composed of two direct repeats of 10 bp, separated by a spacer of 11 bp. Fusion of this site to gfp allowed us to systematically introduce single-base substitutions in the repeats region and to assess the relative contribution of various positions to promoter strength. We then developed an algorithm giving different weights to these positions, and performed a chromosome-wide bioinformatics search which was validated by transcriptome analysis. We identified 13 genes, mostly bacteriocin related, that are directly under the control of SilA. Having developed the ability to quantify SilCR signaling via GFP accumulation prompted us to search for GAS and GGS strains that sense and produce SilCR. While the majority of GAS strains lost sil, all GGS strains examined still possess the locus and ∼63% are able to respond to exogenously added SilCR. By triggering the autoinduction circle using a minute concentration of synthetic SilCR, we identified GAS and GGS strains that are capable of sensing and naturally producing SilCR, and showed that SilCR can be sensed across these streptococci species. These findings suggest that sil may be involved in colonization and establishment of commensal host-bacterial relationships. Public Library of Science 2009-11-06 /pmc/articles/PMC2766830/ /pubmed/19893632 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1000651 Text en Belotserkovsky et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Belotserkovsky, Ilia
Baruch, Moshe
Peer, Asaf
Dov, Eran
Ravins, Miriam
Mishalian, Inbal
Persky, Merav
Smith, Yoav
Hanski, Emanuel
Functional Analysis of the Quorum-Sensing Streptococcal Invasion Locus (sil)
title Functional Analysis of the Quorum-Sensing Streptococcal Invasion Locus (sil)
title_full Functional Analysis of the Quorum-Sensing Streptococcal Invasion Locus (sil)
title_fullStr Functional Analysis of the Quorum-Sensing Streptococcal Invasion Locus (sil)
title_full_unstemmed Functional Analysis of the Quorum-Sensing Streptococcal Invasion Locus (sil)
title_short Functional Analysis of the Quorum-Sensing Streptococcal Invasion Locus (sil)
title_sort functional analysis of the quorum-sensing streptococcal invasion locus (sil)
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2766830/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19893632
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1000651
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