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Molecular and Functional Profiling of the Polyamine Content in Enteroinvasive E. coli : Looking into the Gap between Commensal E. coli and Harmful Shigella

Polyamines are small molecules associated with a wide variety of physiological functions. Bacterial pathogens have developed subtle strategies to exploit polyamines or manipulate polyamine-related processes to optimize fitness within the host. During the transition from its innocuous E. coli ancesto...

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Autores principales: Campilongo, Rosaria, Di Martino, Maria Letizia, Marcocci, Lucia, Pietrangeli, Paola, Leuzzi, Adriano, Grossi, Milena, Casalino, Mariassunta, Nicoletti, Mauro, Micheli, Gioacchino, Colonna, Bianca, Prosseda, Gianni
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4156367/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25192335
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0106589
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author Campilongo, Rosaria
Di Martino, Maria Letizia
Marcocci, Lucia
Pietrangeli, Paola
Leuzzi, Adriano
Grossi, Milena
Casalino, Mariassunta
Nicoletti, Mauro
Micheli, Gioacchino
Colonna, Bianca
Prosseda, Gianni
author_facet Campilongo, Rosaria
Di Martino, Maria Letizia
Marcocci, Lucia
Pietrangeli, Paola
Leuzzi, Adriano
Grossi, Milena
Casalino, Mariassunta
Nicoletti, Mauro
Micheli, Gioacchino
Colonna, Bianca
Prosseda, Gianni
author_sort Campilongo, Rosaria
collection PubMed
description Polyamines are small molecules associated with a wide variety of physiological functions. Bacterial pathogens have developed subtle strategies to exploit polyamines or manipulate polyamine-related processes to optimize fitness within the host. During the transition from its innocuous E. coli ancestor, Shigella, the aetiological agent of bacillary dysentery, has undergone drastic genomic rearrangements affecting the polyamine profile. A pathoadaptation process involving the speG gene and the cad operon has led to spermidine accumulation and loss of cadaverine. While a higher spermidine content promotes the survival of Shigella within infected macrophages, the lack of cadaverine boosts the pathogenic potential of the bacterium in host tissues. Enteroinvasive E. coli (EIEC) display the same pathogenicity process as Shigella, but have a higher infectious dose and a higher metabolic activity. Pathoadaption events affecting the cad locus have occurred also in EIEC, silencing cadaverine production. Since EIEC are commonly regarded as evolutionary intermediates between E. coli and Shigella, we investigated on their polyamine profile in order to better understand which changes have occurred along the path to pathogenicity. By functional and molecular analyses carried out in EIEC strains belonging to different serotypes, we show that speG has been silenced in one strain only, favouring resistance to oxidative stress conditions and survival within macrophages. At the same time, we observe that the content of spermidine and putrescine, a relevant intermediate in the synthesis of spermidine, is higher in all strains as compared to E. coli. This may represent an evolutionary response to the lack of cadaverine. Indeed, restoring cadaverine synthesis decreases the expression of the speC gene, whose product affects putrescine production. In the light of these results, we discuss the possible impact of pathoadaptation events on the evolutionary emergence of a polyamine profile favouring to the pathogenic lifestyle of Shigella and EIEC.
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spelling pubmed-41563672014-09-09 Molecular and Functional Profiling of the Polyamine Content in Enteroinvasive E. coli : Looking into the Gap between Commensal E. coli and Harmful Shigella Campilongo, Rosaria Di Martino, Maria Letizia Marcocci, Lucia Pietrangeli, Paola Leuzzi, Adriano Grossi, Milena Casalino, Mariassunta Nicoletti, Mauro Micheli, Gioacchino Colonna, Bianca Prosseda, Gianni PLoS One Research Article Polyamines are small molecules associated with a wide variety of physiological functions. Bacterial pathogens have developed subtle strategies to exploit polyamines or manipulate polyamine-related processes to optimize fitness within the host. During the transition from its innocuous E. coli ancestor, Shigella, the aetiological agent of bacillary dysentery, has undergone drastic genomic rearrangements affecting the polyamine profile. A pathoadaptation process involving the speG gene and the cad operon has led to spermidine accumulation and loss of cadaverine. While a higher spermidine content promotes the survival of Shigella within infected macrophages, the lack of cadaverine boosts the pathogenic potential of the bacterium in host tissues. Enteroinvasive E. coli (EIEC) display the same pathogenicity process as Shigella, but have a higher infectious dose and a higher metabolic activity. Pathoadaption events affecting the cad locus have occurred also in EIEC, silencing cadaverine production. Since EIEC are commonly regarded as evolutionary intermediates between E. coli and Shigella, we investigated on their polyamine profile in order to better understand which changes have occurred along the path to pathogenicity. By functional and molecular analyses carried out in EIEC strains belonging to different serotypes, we show that speG has been silenced in one strain only, favouring resistance to oxidative stress conditions and survival within macrophages. At the same time, we observe that the content of spermidine and putrescine, a relevant intermediate in the synthesis of spermidine, is higher in all strains as compared to E. coli. This may represent an evolutionary response to the lack of cadaverine. Indeed, restoring cadaverine synthesis decreases the expression of the speC gene, whose product affects putrescine production. In the light of these results, we discuss the possible impact of pathoadaptation events on the evolutionary emergence of a polyamine profile favouring to the pathogenic lifestyle of Shigella and EIEC. Public Library of Science 2014-09-05 /pmc/articles/PMC4156367/ /pubmed/25192335 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0106589 Text en © 2014 Campilongo 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
Campilongo, Rosaria
Di Martino, Maria Letizia
Marcocci, Lucia
Pietrangeli, Paola
Leuzzi, Adriano
Grossi, Milena
Casalino, Mariassunta
Nicoletti, Mauro
Micheli, Gioacchino
Colonna, Bianca
Prosseda, Gianni
Molecular and Functional Profiling of the Polyamine Content in Enteroinvasive E. coli : Looking into the Gap between Commensal E. coli and Harmful Shigella
title Molecular and Functional Profiling of the Polyamine Content in Enteroinvasive E. coli : Looking into the Gap between Commensal E. coli and Harmful Shigella
title_full Molecular and Functional Profiling of the Polyamine Content in Enteroinvasive E. coli : Looking into the Gap between Commensal E. coli and Harmful Shigella
title_fullStr Molecular and Functional Profiling of the Polyamine Content in Enteroinvasive E. coli : Looking into the Gap between Commensal E. coli and Harmful Shigella
title_full_unstemmed Molecular and Functional Profiling of the Polyamine Content in Enteroinvasive E. coli : Looking into the Gap between Commensal E. coli and Harmful Shigella
title_short Molecular and Functional Profiling of the Polyamine Content in Enteroinvasive E. coli : Looking into the Gap between Commensal E. coli and Harmful Shigella
title_sort molecular and functional profiling of the polyamine content in enteroinvasive e. coli : looking into the gap between commensal e. coli and harmful shigella
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4156367/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25192335
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0106589
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