Affiliation:
1. Department of Microbiology, University of Minnesota Medical School, Minneapolis, Minnesota
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Utilization of the enterobactin siderophore by the respiratory pathogens
Bordetella pertussis
and
Bordetella bronchiseptica
is dependent on the BfeA outer membrane receptor. This study determined that production of BfeA was increased significantly in iron-starved bacteria upon supplementation of cultures with enterobactin. A 1.01-kb open reading frame, designated
bfeR
, encoding a predicted positive transcriptional regulator of the AraC family was identified upstream and divergently oriented from
bfeA
. In iron-depleted cultures containing enterobactin, a
Bordetella bfeR
mutant exhibited markedly decreased BfeA receptor production compared to that of the wild-type strain. Additionally,
B. pertussis
and
B. bronchiseptica bfeR
mutants exhibited impaired growth with ferric enterobactin as the sole source of iron, demonstrating that effective enterobactin utilization is
bfeR
dependent. Transcriptional analysis using
bfeA
-
lacZ
reporter fusions in wild-type strains demonstrated that
bfeA
transcription was stimulated in iron-depleted conditions in the presence of enterobactin, compared to modest expression levels in cultures lacking enterobactin. In contrast,
bfeA
transcription in
B. pertussis
and
B. bronchiseptica bfeR
mutants was completely unresponsive to the enterobactin inducer.
bfeA
transcriptional analyses of a
bfeA
mutant demonstrated that induction by enterobactin did not require BfeA receptor-mediated uptake of the siderophore. These studies establish that
bfeR
encodes an enterobactin-dependent positive regulator of
bfeA
transcription in these
Bordetella
species.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
40 articles.
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