Tail-specific protease is an essential Chlamydia virulence factor that mediates the differentiation of elementary bodies into reticulate bodies
Tail-specific proteases (Tsp) are members of a widely distributed family of serine proteases that commonly target and process periplasmic proteins in Gram-negative bacteria. The obligately intracellular, Gram-negative encode a highly conserved Tsp homolog whose target and function are unclear. We id...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Infection and immunity 2024-12, Vol.92 (12), p.e0043624 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Tail-specific proteases (Tsp) are members of a widely distributed family of serine proteases that commonly target and process periplasmic proteins in Gram-negative bacteria. The obligately intracellular, Gram-negative
encode a highly conserved Tsp homolog whose target and function are unclear. We identified a
mutant with a nonsense mutation in
. Differentiation of the
mutant elementary bodies into vegetative reticulate bodies was delayed at 37°C and completely blocked at 40°C. Tsp localized to
cells but was not detected outside the inclusion, suggesting that it targets chlamydial rather than host proteins. The abundance of key chlamydia outer membrane complex and virulence-related proteins differed in wild-type and
mutant elementary bodies, consistent with the possibility that Tsp regulates developmental cycle progression. The altered abundances of chlamydial structural and virulence factors could explain why the mutant, but not an isogenic recombinant with wild-type
, was highly attenuated in a mouse intravaginal infection model. Thus, chlamydial Tsp is required for timely differentiation of elementary bodies into reticulate bodies
and is an essential virulence factor
. |
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ISSN: | 0019-9567 1098-5522 1098-5522 |
DOI: | 10.1128/iai.00436-24 |