Affiliation:
1. Instituto de Biología Molecular y Celular de Rosario, Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Tecnológicas, Universidad Nacional de Rosario, Rosario, Santa Fe, Argentina
Abstract
ABSTRACT
PrtA is the major secreted metalloprotease of
Serratia marcescens
. Previous reports implicate PrtA in the pathogenic capacity of this bacterium. PrtA is also clinically used as a potent analgesic and anti-inflammatory drug, and its catalytic properties attract industrial interest. Comparatively, there is scarce knowledge about the mechanisms that physiologically govern PrtA expression in
Serratia
. In this work, we demonstrate that PrtA production is derepressed when the bacterial growth temperature decreases from 37°C to 30°C. We show that this thermoregulation occurs at the transcriptional level. We determined that upstream of
prtA
, there is a conserved motif that is directly recognized by the CpxR transcriptional regulator. This feature is found along
Serratia
strains irrespective of their isolation source, suggesting an evolutionary conservation of CpxR-dependent regulation of PrtA expression. We found that in
S. marcescen
s, the CpxAR system is more active at 37°C than at 30°C. In good agreement with these results, in a
cpxR
mutant background,
prtA
is derepressed at 37°C, while overexpression of the NlpE lipoprotein, a well-known CpxAR-inducing condition, inhibits PrtA expression, suggesting that the levels of the activated form of CpxR are increased at 37°C over those at 30°C. In addition, we establish that PrtA is involved in the ability of
S. marcescens
to develop biofilm. In accordance, CpxR influences the biofilm phenotype only when bacteria are grown at 37°C. In sum, our findings shed light on regulatory mechanisms that fine-tune PrtA expression and reveal a novel role for PrtA in the lifestyle of
S. marcescens
.
IMPORTANCE
We demonstrate that
S. marcescens
metalloprotease PrtA expression is transcriptionally thermoregulated. While strongly activated below 30°C, its expression is downregulated at 37°C. We found that in
S. marcescens
, the CpxAR signal transduction system, which responds to envelope stress and bacterial surface adhesion, is activated at 37°C and able to downregulate PrtA expression by direct interaction of CpxR with a binding motif located upstream of the
prtA
gene. Moreover, we reveal that PrtA expression favors the ability of
S. marcescens
to develop biofilm, irrespective of the bacterial growth temperature. In this context, thermoregulation along with a highly conserved CpxR-dependent modulation mechanism gives clues about the relevance of PrtA as a factor implicated in the persistence of
S. marcescens
on abiotic surfaces and in bacterial host colonization capacity.
Funder
MINCyT | Agencia Nacional de Promoción Científica y Tecnológica
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Reference82 articles.
1. Serratia marcescens: an outbreak experience
2. The Genus Serratia
3. Serratia Infections: from Military Experiments to Current Practice
4. Lawe-Davies O Bennett S. 2017. WHO publishes list of bacteria for which new antibiotics are urgently needed. News release. WHO Geneva Switzerland. http://www.who.int/mediacentre/news/releases/2017/bacteria-antibiotics-needed/en/.
5. Bacteriome and Mycobiome Interactions Underscore Microbial Dysbiosis in Familial Crohn’s Disease
Cited by
16 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献