8 research outputs found

    SigB-Dependent In Vitro Transcription of prfA and Some Newly Identified Genes of Listeria monocytogenes Whose Expression Is Affected by PrfA In Vivo

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    Recent studies have identified several new genes in Listeria monocytogenes which are positively or negatively affected by PrfA and grouped into three classes (E. Milohanic et al., Mol. Microbiol. 47:1613-1625, 2003). In vitro transcription performed with promoters of some class III genes showed strict SigB-dependent but PrfA-independent transcription initiation. Transcription starting at the prfA promoter PprfA2 was also optimal with SigB-loaded RNA polymerase, suggesting a direct link between SigB- and PrfA-dependent gene expression

    The Bacterial Virulence Factor Inlc Perturbs Apical Cell Junctions And Promotes Cell-To-Cell Spread Of Listeria

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    Several pathogenic bacteria, including Listeria monocytogenes, use an F-actin motility process to spread between mammalian cells. Actin \u27comet tails\u27 propel Listeria through the cytoplasm, resulting in bacteria-containing membrane protrusions that are internalized by neighbouring cells. The mechanism by which Listeria overcomes cortical tension to generate protrusions is unknown. Here, we identify bacterial and host proteins that directly regulate protrusions. We show that efficient spreading between polarized epithelial cells requires the secreted Listeria virulence protein InlC (internalin C). We next identify the mammalian adaptor protein Tuba as a ligand of InlC. InlC binds to a carboxy-terminal SH3 domain in Tuba, which normally engages the human actin regulatory protein N-WASP. InlC promotes protrusion formation by inhibiting Tuba and N-WASP activity, probably by impairing binding of N-WASP to the Tuba SH3 domain. Tuba and N-WASP are known to control the structure of apical junctions in epithelial cells. We demonstrate that, by inhibiting Tuba and N-WASP, InlC makes taut apical junctions become slack. Experiments with myosin II inhibitors indicate that InlC-mediated perturbation of apical junctions accounts for the role of this bacterial protein in protrusion formation. Collectively, our results suggest that InlC promotes bacterial dissemination by relieving cortical tension, thereby enhancing the ability of motile bacteria to deform the plasma membrane into protrusions

    Species-Specific Differences in the Activity of PrfA, the Key Regulator of Listerial Virulence Genes

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    PrfA, the master regulator of LIPI-1, is indispensable for the pathogenesis of the human pathogen Listeria monocytogenes and the animal pathogen Listeria ivanovii. PrfA is also present in the apathogenic species Listeria seeligeri, and in this study, we elucidate the differences between PrfA proteins from the pathogenic and apathogenic species of the genus Listeria. PrfA proteins of L. monocytogenes (PrfA(Lm) and PrfA*(Lm)), L. ivanovii (PrfA(Li)), and L. seeligeri (PrfA(Ls)) were purified, and their equilibrium constants for binding to the PrfA box of the hly promoter (Phly(Lm)) were determined by surface plasmon resonance. In addition, the capacities of these PrfA proteins to bind to the PrfA-dependent promoters Phly and PactA and to form ternary complexes together with RNA polymerase were analyzed in electrophoretic mobility shift assays, and their abilities to initiate transcription in vitro starting at these promoters were compared. The results show that PrfA(Li) resembled the constitutively active mutant PrfA*(Lm) more than the wild-type PrfA(Lm), whereas PrfA(Ls) showed a drastically reduced capacity to bind to the PrfA-dependent promoters Phly and PactA. In contrast, the efficiencies of PrfA(Lm), PrfA*(Lm), and PrfA(Li) forming ternary complexes and initiating transcription at Phly and PactA were rather similar, while those of PrfA(Ls) were also much lower. The low binding and transcriptional activation capacities of PrfA(Ls) seem to be in part due to amino acid exchanges in its C-terminal domain (compared to PrfA(Lm) and PrfA(Li)). In contrast to the significant differences in the biochemical properties of PrfA(Lm), PrfA(Li), and PrfA(Ls), the PrfA-dependent promoters of hly (Phly(Lm), Phly(L)(i), and Phly(L)(s)) and actA (PactA(Lm), PactA(L)(i), and PactA(L)(s)) of the three Listeria species did not significantly differ in their binding affinities to the various PrfA proteins and in their strengths to promote transcription in vitro. The allelic replacement of prfA(Lm) with prfA(Ls) in L. monocytogenes leads to low expression of PrfA-dependent genes and to reduced in vivo virulence of L. monocytogenes, suggesting that the altered properties of PrfA(Ls) protein are a major cause for the low virulence of L. seeligeri

    Glycerol Metabolism and PrfA Activity in Listeria monocytogenes▿ †

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    Listeria monocytogenes is able to efficiently utilize glycerol as a carbon source. In a defined minimal medium, the growth rate (during balanced growth) in the presence of glycerol is similar to that in the presence of glucose or cellobiose. Comparative transcriptome analyses of L. monocytogenes showed high-level transcriptional upregulation of the genes known to be involved in glycerol uptake and metabolism (glpFK and glpD) in the presence of glycerol (compared to that in the presence of glucose and/or cellobiose). Levels of expression of the genes encoding a second putative glycerol uptake facilitator (GlpF2) and a second putative glycerol kinase (GlpK2) were less enhanced under these conditions. GlpK1 but not GlpK2 was essential for glycerol catabolism in L. monocytogenes under extracellular conditions, while the loss of GlpK1 affected replication in Caco-2 cells less than did the loss of GlpK2 and GlpD. Additional genes whose transcription levels were higher in the presence of glycerol than in the presence of glucose and cellobiose included those for two dihydroxyacetone (Dha) kinases and many genes that are under carbon catabolite repression control. Transcriptional downregulation in the presence of glycerol (compared to those in the presence glucose and cellobiose) was observed for several genes and operons that are positively regulated by glucose, including genes involved in glycolysis, N metabolism, and the biosynthesis of branched-chain amino acids. The highest level of transcriptional upregulation was observed for all PrfA-dependent genes during early and late logarithmic growth in glycerol. Under these conditions, a low level of HPr-Ser-P and a high level of HPr-His-P were present in the cells, suggesting that all enzyme IIA (EIIA) (or EIIB) components of the phosphotransferase system (PTS) permeases expressed will be phosphorylated. These and other data suggest that the phosphorylation state of PTS permeases correlates with PrfA activity
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