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Bacterial Indole as a Multifunctional Regulator of Klebsiella oxytoca Complex Enterotoxicity

Gastrointestinal microbes respond to biochemical metabolites that coordinate their behaviors. Here, we demonstrate that bacterial indole functions as a multifactorial mitigator of Klebsiella grimontii and Klebsiella oxytoca pathogenicity. These closely related microbes produce the enterotoxins tilim...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Ledala, Nagender, Malik, Mishika, Rezaul, Karim, Paveglio, Sara, Provatas, Anthony, Kiel, Aaron, Caimano, Melissa, Zhou, Yanjiao, Lindgren, Jonathan, Krasulova, Kristyna, Illes, Peter, Dvořák, Zdeněk, Kortagere, Sandhya, Kienesberger, Sabine, Cosic, Amar, Pöltl, Lisa, Zechner, Ellen L., Ghosh, Subho, Mani, Sridhar, Radolf, Justin D., Matson, Adam P.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society for Microbiology 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8787480/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35073747
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mbio.03752-21
Descripción
Sumario:Gastrointestinal microbes respond to biochemical metabolites that coordinate their behaviors. Here, we demonstrate that bacterial indole functions as a multifactorial mitigator of Klebsiella grimontii and Klebsiella oxytoca pathogenicity. These closely related microbes produce the enterotoxins tilimycin and tilivalline; cytotoxin-producing strains are the causative agent of antibiotic-associated hemorrhagic colitis and have been associated with necrotizing enterocolitis of premature infants. We demonstrate that carbohydrates induce cytotoxin synthesis while concurrently repressing indole biosynthesis. Conversely, indole represses cytotoxin production. In both cases, the alterations stemmed from differential transcription of npsA and npsB, key genes involved in tilimycin biosynthesis. Indole also enhances conversion of tilimycin to tilivalline, an indole analog with reduced cytotoxicity. In this context, we established that tilivalline, but not tilimycin, is a strong agonist of pregnane X receptor (PXR), a master regulator of xenobiotic detoxification and intestinal inflammation. Tilivalline binding upregulated PXR-responsive detoxifying genes and inhibited tubulin-directed toxicity. Bacterial indole, therefore, acts in a multifunctional manner to mitigate cytotoxicity by Klebsiella spp.: suppression of toxin production, enhanced conversion of tilimycin to tilivalline, and activation of PXR.