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Haemophilus ducreyi Hfq Contributes to Virulence Gene Regulation as Cells Enter Stationary Phase

To adapt to stresses encountered in stationary phase, Gram-negative bacteria utilize the alternative sigma factor RpoS. However, some species lack RpoS; thus, it is unclear how stationary-phase adaptation is regulated in these organisms. Here we defined the growth-phase-dependent transcriptomes of H...

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Autores principales: Gangaiah, Dharanesh, Labandeira-Rey, Maria, Zhang, Xinjun, Fortney, Kate R., Ellinger, Sheila, Zwickl, Beth, Baker, Beth, Liu, Yunlong, Janowicz, Diane M., Katz, Barry P., Brautigam, Chad A., Munson, Robert S., Hansen, Eric J., Spinola, Stanley M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society of Microbiology 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3950518/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24520065
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mBio.01081-13
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author Gangaiah, Dharanesh
Labandeira-Rey, Maria
Zhang, Xinjun
Fortney, Kate R.
Ellinger, Sheila
Zwickl, Beth
Baker, Beth
Liu, Yunlong
Janowicz, Diane M.
Katz, Barry P.
Brautigam, Chad A.
Munson, Robert S.
Hansen, Eric J.
Spinola, Stanley M.
author_facet Gangaiah, Dharanesh
Labandeira-Rey, Maria
Zhang, Xinjun
Fortney, Kate R.
Ellinger, Sheila
Zwickl, Beth
Baker, Beth
Liu, Yunlong
Janowicz, Diane M.
Katz, Barry P.
Brautigam, Chad A.
Munson, Robert S.
Hansen, Eric J.
Spinola, Stanley M.
author_sort Gangaiah, Dharanesh
collection PubMed
description To adapt to stresses encountered in stationary phase, Gram-negative bacteria utilize the alternative sigma factor RpoS. However, some species lack RpoS; thus, it is unclear how stationary-phase adaptation is regulated in these organisms. Here we defined the growth-phase-dependent transcriptomes of Haemophilus ducreyi, which lacks an RpoS homolog. Compared to mid-log-phase organisms, cells harvested from the stationary phase upregulated genes encoding several virulence determinants and a homolog of hfq. Insertional inactivation of hfq altered the expression of ~16% of the H. ducreyi genes. Importantly, there were a significant overlap and an inverse correlation in the transcript levels of genes differentially expressed in the hfq inactivation mutant relative to its parent and the genes differentially expressed in stationary phase relative to mid-log phase in the parent. Inactivation of hfq downregulated genes in the flp-tad and lspB-lspA2 operons, which encode several virulence determinants. To comply with FDA guidelines for human inoculation experiments, an unmarked hfq deletion mutant was constructed and was fully attenuated for virulence in humans. Inactivation or deletion of hfq downregulated Flp1 and impaired the ability of H. ducreyi to form microcolonies, downregulated DsrA and rendered H. ducreyi serum susceptible, and downregulated LspB and LspA2, which allow H. ducreyi to resist phagocytosis. We propose that, in the absence of an RpoS homolog, Hfq serves as a major contributor of H. ducreyi stationary-phase and virulence gene regulation. The contribution of Hfq to stationary-phase gene regulation may have broad implications for other organisms that lack an RpoS homolog.
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spelling pubmed-39505182014-03-12 Haemophilus ducreyi Hfq Contributes to Virulence Gene Regulation as Cells Enter Stationary Phase Gangaiah, Dharanesh Labandeira-Rey, Maria Zhang, Xinjun Fortney, Kate R. Ellinger, Sheila Zwickl, Beth Baker, Beth Liu, Yunlong Janowicz, Diane M. Katz, Barry P. Brautigam, Chad A. Munson, Robert S. Hansen, Eric J. Spinola, Stanley M. mBio Research Article To adapt to stresses encountered in stationary phase, Gram-negative bacteria utilize the alternative sigma factor RpoS. However, some species lack RpoS; thus, it is unclear how stationary-phase adaptation is regulated in these organisms. Here we defined the growth-phase-dependent transcriptomes of Haemophilus ducreyi, which lacks an RpoS homolog. Compared to mid-log-phase organisms, cells harvested from the stationary phase upregulated genes encoding several virulence determinants and a homolog of hfq. Insertional inactivation of hfq altered the expression of ~16% of the H. ducreyi genes. Importantly, there were a significant overlap and an inverse correlation in the transcript levels of genes differentially expressed in the hfq inactivation mutant relative to its parent and the genes differentially expressed in stationary phase relative to mid-log phase in the parent. Inactivation of hfq downregulated genes in the flp-tad and lspB-lspA2 operons, which encode several virulence determinants. To comply with FDA guidelines for human inoculation experiments, an unmarked hfq deletion mutant was constructed and was fully attenuated for virulence in humans. Inactivation or deletion of hfq downregulated Flp1 and impaired the ability of H. ducreyi to form microcolonies, downregulated DsrA and rendered H. ducreyi serum susceptible, and downregulated LspB and LspA2, which allow H. ducreyi to resist phagocytosis. We propose that, in the absence of an RpoS homolog, Hfq serves as a major contributor of H. ducreyi stationary-phase and virulence gene regulation. The contribution of Hfq to stationary-phase gene regulation may have broad implications for other organisms that lack an RpoS homolog. American Society of Microbiology 2014-02-11 /pmc/articles/PMC3950518/ /pubmed/24520065 http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mBio.01081-13 Text en Copyright © 2014 Gangaiah et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/) , which permits unrestricted noncommercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Gangaiah, Dharanesh
Labandeira-Rey, Maria
Zhang, Xinjun
Fortney, Kate R.
Ellinger, Sheila
Zwickl, Beth
Baker, Beth
Liu, Yunlong
Janowicz, Diane M.
Katz, Barry P.
Brautigam, Chad A.
Munson, Robert S.
Hansen, Eric J.
Spinola, Stanley M.
Haemophilus ducreyi Hfq Contributes to Virulence Gene Regulation as Cells Enter Stationary Phase
title Haemophilus ducreyi Hfq Contributes to Virulence Gene Regulation as Cells Enter Stationary Phase
title_full Haemophilus ducreyi Hfq Contributes to Virulence Gene Regulation as Cells Enter Stationary Phase
title_fullStr Haemophilus ducreyi Hfq Contributes to Virulence Gene Regulation as Cells Enter Stationary Phase
title_full_unstemmed Haemophilus ducreyi Hfq Contributes to Virulence Gene Regulation as Cells Enter Stationary Phase
title_short Haemophilus ducreyi Hfq Contributes to Virulence Gene Regulation as Cells Enter Stationary Phase
title_sort haemophilus ducreyi hfq contributes to virulence gene regulation as cells enter stationary phase
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3950518/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24520065
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mBio.01081-13
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