Affiliation:
1. University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15219
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Clostridium perfringens
type A food poisoning is the second most commonly identified bacterial food-borne illness. Sporulation contributes to this disease in two ways: (i) most food-poisoning strains form exceptionally resistant spores to facilitate their survival of food-associated stresses, and (ii) the enterotoxin (CPE) responsible for the symptoms of this food poisoning is synthesized only during sporulation. In
Bacillus subtilis
, four alternative sigma factors mediate sporulation. The same four sigma factors are encoded by
C. perfringens
genomes, and two (SigE and SigK) have previously been shown to be necessary for sporulation and CPE production by SM101, a transformable derivative of a
C. perfringens
food-poisoning strain (K. H. Harry, R. Zhou, L. Kroos, and S. B. Melville, J. Bacteriol. 2009, 191:2728-2742). However, the importance of SigF and SigG for
C. perfringens
sporulation or CPE production had not yet been assessed. In the current study, after confirming that sporulating wild-type SM101 cultures produce SigF (from a tricistronic operon) and SigG, we prepared isogenic
sigF
- or
sigG
-null mutants. Whereas SM101 formed heat-resistant, phase-refractile spores, spore formation was blocked in the
sigF
- and
sigG
-null mutants. Complementation fully restored sporulation by both mutants. By use of these mutants and complementing strains, CPE production was shown to be SigF dependent but SigG independent. This finding apparently involved regulation of the production of SigE and SigK, which Harry et al. showed to be necessary for CPE synthesis, by SigF. By combining these findings with those previous results, it is now apparent that all four alternative sigma factors are necessary for
C. perfringens
sporulation, but only SigE, SigF, and SigK are needed for CPE synthesis.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology