Affiliation:
1. Institute for Molecular Biology, Friedrich Schiller University Jena, D-07745 Jena, Germany
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Synthesis of the plasminogen activator streptokinase (SK) by group A streptococci (GAS) has recently been shown to be subject to control by two two-component regulators,
covRS
(or
csrRS
) and
fasBCA
. In independent studies, response regulator CovR proved to act as the repressor, whereas FasA was found to act indirectly as the activator by controlling the expression of a stimulatory RNA,
fasX
. In an attempt at understanding the regulation of SK production in the human group C streptococcal (GCS) strain H46A, the strongest SK producer known yet, we provide here physical and functional evidence for the presence of the
cov
and
fas
systems in GCS as well and, using a mutational approach, compare the balance between their opposing actions in H46A and GAS strain NZ131. Sequence analysis combined with Southern hybridization revealed that the
covRS
and
fasCAX
operons are preserved at high levels of primary structure identity between the corresponding GAS and GCS genes, with the exception of
fasB
, encoding a second sensor kinase that is not a member of the GCS
fas
operon. This analysis also showed that wild-type H46A is actually a derepressed mutant for SK and streptolysin S (SLS) synthesis, carrying a K102 amber mutation in
covR.
Using
cov
and
fas
mutations in various combinations together with strain constructs allowing complementation in
trans
, we found that, in H46A,
cov
and
fas
contribute to approximately equal negative and positive extents, respectively, to constitutive SK and SLS activity. The amounts of SK paralleled the level of
skc
H46A
transcription. The most profound difference between H46A and NZ131 regarding the relative activities of the
cov
and
fas
systems consisted in significantly higher activity of a functional CovR repressor in NZ131 than in H46A. In NZ131, CovR decreased SK activity in a Fas
+
background about sevenfold, compared to a 1.9-fold reduction of SK activity in H46A. Combined with the very short-lived nature of
covR
mRNA (decay rate, 1.39/min), such differences may contribute to strain-specific peculiarities of the expression of two prominent streptococcal virulence factors in response to environmental changes.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology
Cited by
37 articles.
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