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Query: UNIPROT:P06889 (
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630,302
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Expression of the
Shigella flexneri
virulence gene regulon is controlled by multiple environmental signals acting through a regulatory cascade. The primary regulator is VirF, which is a positive regulator of the secondary regulatory gene virB and the structural gene icsA. The product of the virB gene in turn activates transcription of the genes coding for the invasion proteins, and for the type III secretion system which promotes export of the invasion proteins to the bacterial cell surface. The genes making up the regulon were studied in their native locations on the 230-kb virulence plasmid. Transcriptional control was detected at each level of the regulatory cascade. A gearing effect was detected upon thermal induction of transcription in the regulon, with the virF gene being induced by about two fold, virB by 10-fold and the structural genes by 100-fold. In addition, each gene studied displayed individual characteristics in its response to stimuli such as growth medium osmolarity, pH, variations in DNA superhelicity and the presence or absence of H-NS. The primary regulatory gene virF, displayed loose regulation under standard laboratory growth conditions. Regulation was tighter at the secondary regulator virB, while control of structural gene expression was tighter still. It is proposed that this regulatory pattern ensures that energetically wasteful expression of the structural genes under inappropriate conditions is avoided while allowing the regulatory genes to be expressed sufficiently under non-permissive conditions to ensure a rapid response to inducing conditions when these arise. Once induced, fine tuning of the response can be achieved through the different sensitivities of the individual regulon members to external stimuli.
Mol
Gen Genet 1997 Sep
PMID:Differential regulation of the plasmid-encoded genes in the Shigella flexneri virulence regulon. 934
The gene for a novel, high molecular weight protein secreted by Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli (STEC) has been cloned, sequenced and characterized with respect to its activity. This gene, designated pssA, is localized on the large plasmid that also harbours the STEC haemolysin operon. Sequencing of a region comprising 10630nt revealed that the sequences flanking the pssA gene are composed of several remnants of different insertion elements. The PssA protein is produced as a 142kDa precursor molecule that, after N- and C-terminal processing, is released into the culture supernatant as a mature polypeptide of approximately 104kDa. The primary sequence of PssA is highly related to a family of autonomously transported putative virulence factors from different Gram-negative pathogens, which includes the Tsh protein of an avian-pathogenic E. coli strain, the SepA protein from
Shigella flexneri
and the EspC protein from enteropathogenic E. coli. A common motif present in all four proteins is reminiscent of the catalytic centre of certain serine proteases. PssA (protease secreted by STEC) indeed shows serine protease activity in a casein-based assay and is moreover cytotoxic for Vero cells. This activity of PssA and probably of other proteins of the Tsh family may be of functional importance during infection of the mucosal cell layer by the bacterial pathogen.
Mol
Microbiol 1997 Aug
PMID:Characterization of an exported protease from Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli. 937 5
The RfaH protein controls the transcription of a specialized group of Escherichia coli and Salmonella operons that direct the synthesis, assembly and export of the lipopolysaccharide core, exopolysaccharide, F conjugation pilus and haemolysin toxin. RfaH is a specific regulator of transcript elongation; its loss increases transcription polarity in these operons without affecting initiation from the operon promoters. The operons of the RfaH-dependent regulon contain a short conserved 5' sequence, the ops element, deletion of which increases operon polarity to an extent similar to that caused by loss of RfaH. The ops element is also present upstream of polysaccharide gene clusters of
Shigella flexneri
, Yersinia enterocolitica, Vibrio cholerae and Klebsiella pneumoniae and the RP4 fertility operon of Pseudomonas aeruginosa, suggesting that this is a widely spread control system. The mechanistic coupling of RfaH and the ops element has been demonstrated in vitro and in vivo, and we suggest that the ops element recruits RfaH and potentially other factors to the RNA polymerase complex, modifying the complex to increase its processivity and allowing transcription to proceed over long distances.
Mol
Microbiol 1997 Dec
PMID:RfaH and the ops element, components of a novel system controlling bacterial transcription elongation. 942 23
We have isolated the lysogenic bacteriophage SfII, which mediates glucosylation of
Shigella flexneri
O-antigen, resulting in expression of the type II antigen. SfII belongs to group A of the Bradley classification and has a genome size of 42.3kb. DNA sequencing of a 4 kb BamHI subclone identified four open reading frames (ORFs), of which only two were found to be necessary for serotype conversion. These genes were named bgt, which encodes a putative bactoprenol glucosyl transferase, and gtrII, encoding the putative type II antigen determining glucosyl transferase. These genes are adjacent to the integrase gene (int) and attachment site (attP), which are highly homologous to those of Salmonella bacteriophage P22. Another ORF encoded a highly hydrophobic protein of 120 amino acids with homologues in Escherichia coli, Salmonella bacteriophage P22 and S. flexneri. Previous studies identified gtrX, the glucosyl transferase gene, of bacteriophage SfX, which also glucosylates the O-antigen specifically. We determined that gtrX-mediated expression of the group 7,8 antigen also requires bgt. This allowed us to identify gtrII as being the serotype antigen II determining glucosyl transferase. Southern hybridization and polymerase chain reaction (PCR) analyses indicated that bgt homologues exist in the genomes of all S. flexneri serotypes and in E. coli K-12, whereas gtrII was only detected in strains of serotype 2. Transposon TnphoA-derived chromosomal mutations of bgt and gtrII in S. flexneri serotype 2a were isolated and characterized. [35S]-methionine labelling and the use of a T7 RNA polymerase expression system identified a protein of 34kDa corresponding to Bgt. However, GtrII, which has a predicted molecular weight of 55 kDa, was not detected. We propose that the function of Bgt is to transfer the glucose residues from the UDP-glucose onto bactoprenol and GtrII then transfers the glucose onto the O-antigen repeat unit at the rhamnose III position. The chromosomal organization of these serotype-converting genes, when compared with their homologues in E. coli K-12 chromosome and the P22 bacteriophage genome, were very similar. This suggests that the regions encode similar functions in these organisms and have a similar evolutionary origin.
Mol
Microbiol 1997 Dec
PMID:Mechanism of bacteriophage SfII-mediated serotype conversion in Shigella flexneri. 942 31
Previously, a promoter was identified in Lactococcus lactis that is specifically induced by chloride. Here, we describe the nucleotide sequence and functional analysis of two genes transcribed from this promoter, gadC and gadB. GadC is homologous to putative glutamate-gamma-aminobutyrate antiporters of Escherichia coli and
Shigella flexneri
and contains 12 putative membrane-spanning domains. GadB shows similarity to glutamate decarboxylases. A L. lactis gadB mutant and a strain that is unable to express both gadB and gadC was more sensitive to low pH than the wild type when NaCl and glutamate were present. Expression of gadCB in L. lactis in the presence of chloride was increased when the culture pH was allowed to decrease to low levels by omitting buffer from the medium, while glutamate also stimulated gadCB expression. Apparently, these genes encode a glutamate-dependent acid resistance mechanism of L. lactis that is optimally active under conditions in which it is needed to maintain viability. Immediately upstream of the chloride-dependent gadCB promoter Pgad, a third gene encodes a protein (GadR) that is homologous to the activator Rgg from Streptococcus gordonii. gadR expression is chloride and glutamate independent. A gadR mutant did not produce the 3kb gadCB mRNA that is found in wild-type cells in the presence of NaCl, indicating that GadR is an activator of the gadCB operon.
Mol
Microbiol 1998 Jan
PMID:A chloride-inducible acid resistance mechanism in Lactococcus lactis and its regulation. 948 86
Oligonucleotide probes were used for identification of Shigella and analysis of the relationship between Shigella spp. and Escherichia coli. Probe-based PCRs shown cross-reactions from Shigella to E. coli. Probe-based 16S rRNA sequencing and phylogenetic analysis showed the four species of Shigella: Sh. dysenteriae, Sh. boydii, Sh. sonnei, and Sh. flexneri, formed a cluster with E. coli.
Shigella flexneri
and Sh. sonnei are even more similar to E. coli than to the other two Shigella species. These results confirmed an earlier recommendation that the four species of Shigella and E. coli should be classified as five sub-groups within a single species.
Mol
Cell Probes 1997 Dec
PMID:Phylogenetic analysis and identification of Shigella spp. by molecular probes. 950 Aug 11
Various gram-negative animal and plant pathogens use a novel, sec-independent protein secretion system as a basic virulence mechanism. It is becoming increasingly clear that these so-called type III secretion systems inject (translocate) proteins into the cytosol of eukaryotic cells, where the translocated proteins facilitate bacterial pathogenesis by specifically interfering with host cell signal transduction and other cellular processes. Accordingly, some type III secretion systems are activated by bacterial contact with host cell surfaces. Individual type III secretion systems direct the secretion and translocation of a variety of unrelated proteins, which account for species-specific pathogenesis phenotypes. In contrast to the secreted virulence factors, most of the 15 to 20 membrane-associated proteins which constitute the type III secretion apparatus are conserved among different pathogens. Most of the inner membrane components of the type III secretion apparatus show additional homologies to flagellar biosynthetic proteins, while a conserved outer membrane factor is similar to secretins from type II and other secretion pathways. Structurally conserved chaperones which specifically bind to individual secreted proteins play an important role in type III protein secretion, apparently by preventing premature interactions of the secreted factors with other proteins. The genes encoding type III secretion systems are clustered, and various pieces of evidence suggest that these systems have been acquired by horizontal genetic transfer during evolution. Expression of type III secretion systems is coordinately regulated in response to host environmental stimuli by networks of transcription factors. This review comprises a comparison of the structure, function, regulation, and impact on host cells of the type III secretion systems in the animal pathogens Yersinia spp., Pseudomonas aeruginosa,
Shigella flexneri
, Salmonella typhimurium, enteropathogenic Escherichia coli, and Chlamydia spp. and the plant pathogens Pseudomonas syringae, Erwinia spp., Ralstonia solanacearum, Xanthomonas campestris, and Rhizobium spp.
Microbiol
Mol
Biol Rev 1998 Jun
PMID:Type III protein secretion systems in bacterial pathogens of animals and plants. 961 47
Lipopolysaccharides (LPS), particularly the O-antigen component, are one of many virulence determinants necessary for
Shigella flexneri
pathogenesis. O-antigen biosynthesis is determined mostly by genes located in the rfb region of the chromosome. The rfc/wzy gene encodes the O-antigen polymerase, an integral membrane protein, which polymerizes the O-antigen repeat units of the LPS. The wild-type rfc/wzy gene has no detectable ribosome-binding site (RBS) and four rare codons in the translation initiation region (TIR). Site-directed mutagenesis of the rare codons at positions 4, 9 and 23 to those corresponding to more abundant tRNAs and introduction of a RBS allowed detection of the rfc/wzy gene product via a T7 promoter/polymerase expression assay. Complementation studies using the rfc/wzy constructs allowed visualization of a novel LPS with unregulated O-antigen chain length distribution, and a modal chain length could be restored by supplying the gene for the O-antigen chain length regulator (Rol/Wzz) on a low-copy-number plasmid. This suggests that the O-antigen chain length distribution is determined by both Rfc/Wzy and Rol/Wzz proteins. The effect on translation of mutating the rare codons was determined using an Rfc::PhoA fusion protein as a reporter. Alkaline phosphatase enzyme assays showed an approximately twofold increase in expression when three of the rare codons were mutated. Analysis of the Rfc/Wzy amino acid sequence using TM-PREDICT indicated that Rfc/Wzy had 10-13 transmembrane segments. The computer prediction models were tested by genetically fusing C-terminal deletions of Rfc/Wzy to alkaline phosphatase and beta-galactosidase. Rfc::PhoA fusion proteins near the amino-terminal end were detected by Coomassie blue staining and Western blotting using anti-PhoA serum. The enzyme activities of cells with the rfc/wzy fusions and the location of the fusions in rfc/wzy indicated that Rfc/Wzy has 12 transmembrane segments with two large periplasmic domains, and that the amino- and carboxy-termini are located on the cytoplasmic face of the membrane.
Mol
Microbiol 1998 Jun
PMID:Overexpression and topology of the Shigella flexneri O-antigen polymerase (Rfc/Wzy). 968 Feb 10
Shigella flexneri
is the causative agent of bacillary dysentery and is a facultative intracellular pathogen. Its virulence regulon is subject to tight control by several mechanisms involving the products of over 20 genes and an array of environmental signals. The reguIon is carried on a plasmid that is prone to instability and to integration into the chromosome, with associated silencing of the virulence genes. Closely related regulons are found in other species of Shigella and in enteroinvasive Escherichia coli. A wealth of detailed information is now available on the Shigella virulence gene control circuits, and it is becoming clear that these share many features with regulatory systems found in other bacterial pathogens. All of this makes the S. flexneri virulence gene control system a very attractive topic for those interested in the nature of gene regulatory networks in bacteria.
Mol
Microbiol 1998 Aug
PMID:The Shigella virulence gene regulatory cascade: a paradigm of bacterial gene control mechanisms. 972 8
Shigella flexneri
is an intracellular pathogen that is able to move within the cytoplasm of infected cells by the continual assembly of actin onto one pole of the bacterium. IcsA, an outer membrane protein, is localized to the old pole of the bacterium and is both necessary and sufficient for actin assembly. IcsA is slowly cleaved from the bacterial surface by the protease IcsP (SopA). Absence of IcsP leads to an alteration in the distribution of surface IcsA, such that the polar cap is maintained and some IcsA is distributed along the lateral walls of the bacillus. The mechanism of unipolar localization of IcsA and the role of IcsP in its unipolar localization are incompletely understood. Here, we demonstrate that cleavage of IcsA occurs exclusively in the outer membrane and that IcsP is localized to the outer membrane. In addition, we show that IcsA at the old pole is susceptible to cleavage by IcsP and that native IcsP is active at the pole. Taken together, these data indicate that IcsP cleaves IcsA over the entire bacterial surface. Finally, we show that, immediately after induction from a tightly regulated promoter, IcsA is expressed exclusively at the old pole in both the icsP- icsA- and the icsA- background. These data demonstrate that unipolar localization of IcsA results from its direct targeting to the pole, followed by its diffusion laterally in the outer membrane.
Mol
Microbiol 1999 Apr
PMID:The unipolar Shigella surface protein IcsA is targeted directly to the bacterial old pole: IcsP cleavage of IcsA occurs over the entire bacterial surface. 1023 92
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