Nutritional Regulation of the Sae Two-Component System by CodY in Staphylococcus aureus
subverts innate defenses during infection in part by killing host immune cells to exacerbate disease. This human pathogen intercepts host cues and activates a transcriptional response via the exoprotein expression (SaeR/SaeS [SaeR/S]) two-component system to secrete virulence factors critical for pa...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of bacteriology 2018-04, Vol.200 (8) |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | subverts innate defenses during infection in part by killing host immune cells to exacerbate disease. This human pathogen intercepts host cues and activates a transcriptional response via the
exoprotein expression (SaeR/SaeS [SaeR/S]) two-component system to secrete virulence factors critical for pathogenesis. We recently showed that the transcriptional repressor CodY adjusts nuclease (
) gene expression via SaeR/S, but the mechanism remained unknown. Here, we identified two CodY binding motifs upstream of the
P1 promoter, which suggested direct regulation by this global regulator. We show that CodY shares a binding site with the positive activator SaeR and that alleviating direct CodY repression at this site is sufficient to abrogate stochastic expression, suggesting that CodY represses
expression by blocking SaeR binding. Epistasis experiments support a model that CodY also controls
indirectly through Agr and Rot-mediated repression of the
P1 promoter. We also demonstrate that CodY repression of
restrains production of secreted cytotoxins that kill human neutrophils. We conclude that CodY plays a previously unrecognized role in controlling virulence gene expression via SaeR/S and suggest a mechanism by which CodY acts as a master regulator of pathogenesis by tying nutrient availability to virulence gene expression.
Bacterial mechanisms that mediate the switch from a commensal to pathogenic lifestyle are among the biggest unanswered questions in infectious disease research. Since the expression of most virulence genes is often correlated with nutrient depletion, this implies that virulence is a response to the lack of nourishment in host tissues and that pathogens like
produce virulence factors in order to gain access to nutrients in the host. Here, we show that specific nutrient depletion signals appear to be funneled to the SaeR/S system through the global regulator CodY. Our findings reveal a strategy by which
delays the production of immune evasion and immune-cell-killing proteins until key nutrients are depleted. |
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ISSN: | 0021-9193 1098-5530 |
DOI: | 10.1128/JB.00012-18 |