cwrA, a gene that specifically responds to cell wall damage in Staphylococcus aureus

Transcriptional profiling data accumulated in recent years for the clinically relevant pathogen Staphylococcus aureus have established a cell wall stress stimulon, which comprises a coordinately regulated set of genes that are upregulated in response to blockage of cell wall biogenesis. In particula...

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Veröffentlicht in:Microbiology (Society for General Microbiology) 2010-05, Vol.156 (Pt 5), p.1372-1383
Hauptverfasser: Balibar, Carl J, Shen, Xiaoyu, McGuire, Dorothy, Yu, Donghui, McKenney, David, Tao, Jianshi
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container_end_page 1383
container_issue Pt 5
container_start_page 1372
container_title Microbiology (Society for General Microbiology)
container_volume 156
creator Balibar, Carl J
Shen, Xiaoyu
McGuire, Dorothy
Yu, Donghui
McKenney, David
Tao, Jianshi
description Transcriptional profiling data accumulated in recent years for the clinically relevant pathogen Staphylococcus aureus have established a cell wall stress stimulon, which comprises a coordinately regulated set of genes that are upregulated in response to blockage of cell wall biogenesis. In particular, the expression of cwrA (SA2343, N315 notation), which encodes a putative 63 amino acid polypeptide of unknown biological function, increases over 100-fold in response to cell wall inhibition. Herein, we seek to understand the biological role that this gene plays in S. aureus. cwrA was found to be robustly induced by all cell wall-targeting antibiotics tested - vancomycin, oxacillin, penicillin G, phosphomycin, imipenem, hymeglusin and bacitracin - but not by antibiotics with other mechanisms of action, including ciprofloxacin, erythromycin, chloramphenicol, triclosan, rifampicin, novobiocin and carbonyl cyanide 3-chlorophenylhydrazone. Although a DeltacwrA S. aureus strain had no appreciable shift in MICs for cell wall-targeting antibiotics, the knockout was shown to have reduced cell wall integrity in a variety of other assays. Additionally, the gene was shown to be important for virulence in a mouse sepsis model of infection.
doi_str_mv 10.1099/mic.0.036129-0
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subjects Animals
Anti-Bacterial Agents - pharmacology
Bacterial Proteins - genetics
Bacterial Proteins - physiology
Bacteriolysis
Cell Wall - drug effects
Cell Wall - physiology
Cell Wall - ultrastructure
Gene Expression Profiling
Gene Knockout Techniques
Genes, Reporter
Lysostaphin - pharmacology
Mice
Microbial Sensitivity Tests
Sepsis - microbiology
Staphylococcus aureus
Staphylococcus aureus - drug effects
Staphylococcus aureus - genetics
Staphylococcus aureus - physiology
Staphylococcus aureus - ultrastructure
Virulence
title cwrA, a gene that specifically responds to cell wall damage in Staphylococcus aureus
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