Abstract
AbstractVibrio parahaemolyticus is the leading cause of seafood-borne diarrheal diseases. Experimental overproduction of a type 3 secretion system (T3SS1) in this pathogen leads to decreased intestinal colonization, which suggests that T3SS1 repression is required for maximal virulence. However, the mechanisms by which T3SS1 is repressed in vivo are unclear. Here, we show that host-derived nitrite modifies the activity of a bacterial histidine kinase and mediates T3SS1 repression. More specifically, nitrite activates histidine kinase sensor VbrK through S-nitrosylation on cysteine 86, which results in downregulation of the entire T3SS1 operon through repression of its positive regulator exsC. Replacement of cysteine 86 with a serine (VbrK C86S mutant) leads to increased expression of inflammatory cytokines in infected Caco-2 cells. In an infant rabbit model of infection, the VbrK C86S mutant induces a stronger inflammatory response at the early stage of infection, and displays reduced intestinal colonization and virulence at the later stage of infection, in comparison with the parent strain. Our results indicate that the pathogen V. parahaemolyticus perceives nitrite as a host-derived signal and responds by downregulating a proinflammatory factor (T3SS1), thus enhancing intestinal colonization and virulence.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
General Physics and Astronomy,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Chemistry