Affiliation:
1. Departments of Physiology
2. Veterans Administration Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System, 11301 Wilshire Blvd., Los Angeles, California 90073
3. Pediatrics, David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, 405 Hilgard Ave., Los Angeles, California 90024
4. Department of Internal Medicine, University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics, Ames, Iowa
5. Medicine
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Helicobacter pylori
colonizes the normal human stomach by maintaining both periplasmic and cytoplasmic pH close to neutral in the presence of gastric acidity. Urease activity, urea flux through the pH-gated urea channel, UreI, and periplasmic α-carbonic anhydrase are essential for colonization. Exposure to pH 4.5 for up to 180 min activates total bacterial urease threefold. Within 30 min at pH 4.5, the urease structural subunits, UreA and UreB, and the Ni
2+
insertion protein, UreE, are recruited to UreI at the inner membrane. Formation of this complex and urease activation depend on expression of the cytoplasmic sensor histidine kinase, HP0244. Its deletion abolishes urease activation and assembly, impairs cytoplasmic and periplasmic pH homeostasis, and depolarizes the cells, with an ∼7-log loss of survival at pH 2.5, even in 10 mM urea. Associated with this assembly, UreI is able to transport NH
3
, NH
4
+
, and CO
2
, as shown by changes in cytoplasmic pH following exposure to NH
4
Cl or CO
2
. To be able to colonize cells in the presence of the highly variable pH of the stomach, the organism expresses two pH-sensor histidine kinases, one, HP0165, responding to a moderate fall in periplasmic pH and the other, HP0244, responding to cytoplasmic acidification at a more acidic medium pH. Assembly of a pH-regulatory complex of active urease with UreI provides an advantage for periplasmic buffering.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
65 articles.
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