4 research outputs found

    Impact of the RNA Chaperone Hfq on the Fitness and Virulence Potential of Uropathogenic Escherichia coli▿ †

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    Hfq is a bacterial RNA chaperone involved in the posttranscriptional regulation of many stress-inducible genes via small noncoding RNAs. Here, we show that Hfq is critical for the uropathogenic Escherichia coli (UPEC) isolate UTI89 to effectively colonize the bladder and kidneys in a murine urinary tract infection model system. The disruption of hfq did not affect bacterial adherence to or invasion of host cells but did limit the development of intracellular microcolonies by UTI89 within the terminally differentiated epithelial cells that line the lumen of the bladder. In vitro, the hfq mutant was significantly impaired in its abilities to handle the antibacterial cationic peptide polymyxin B and reactive nitrogen and oxygen radicals and to grow in acidic medium (pH 5.0). Relative to the wild-type strain, the hfq mutant also had a substantially reduced migration rate on motility agar and was less prone to form biofilms. Hfq activities are known to impact the regulation of both the stationary-phase sigma factor RpoS (σS) and the envelope stress response sigma factor RpoE (σE). Although we saw similarities among hfq, rpoS, and rpoE deletion mutants in our assays, the rpoE and hfq mutants were phenotypically the most alike. Cumulatively, our data indicate that Hfq likely affects UPEC virulence-related phenotypes primarily by modulating membrane homeostasis and envelope stress response pathways

    The Role of Alternative Sigma Factors in Pathogen Virulence

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    Alternative sigma factors enable bacteria to change the promoter specificity of the core RNA polymerase to enable the expression of genes that give them advantages in particular situations. The number of alternative sigma factors that bacteria produce varies greatly. Some bacteria, particularly those that reside in the soil have genes for multiple sigma factors. The soil living gram positive bacteria Sorangium cellulosum currently holds the record for the number of sigma factor genes at 109. Alternative sigma factors play important roles in the life cycle of many foodborne bacterial pathogens. In this review we will discuss: the structure and function of alternative sigma factors; the different families of alternative sigma factors; their regulation; the role of particular alternative sigma factors and the genes they control in the biology (particularly pathogenesis) of foodborne bacterial pathogens
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