Affiliation:
1. Department of Microbiology and Immunology, University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario, Canada
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Staphylococcus aureus
SirA was previously identified as a lipoprotein, and SirB and SirC are thought to encode the transmembrane domains of an ABC transporter. Sir proteins show similarity to iron-siderophore transporters in several bacteria. Here, we show that the iron-regulated
sirABC
operon is divergently transcribed from the
sbn
operon that encodes enzymes involved in the synthesis of staphylobactin, a recently described siderophore produced by
S. aureus
. Mutation of either
sirA
or
sirB
increased the resistance of iron-starved
S. aureus
to streptonigrin and resulted in compromised growth in iron-restricted, but not iron-rich, media. We also demonstrated that
sirA
and
sirB
mutants are compromised in the ability to transport iron complexed to staphylobactin but are not compromised for uptake of other iron complexes, such as ferric hydroxamates, ferric enterobactin, or ferric citrate. SirA- and SirB-deficient
S. aureus
, however, retain the ability to produce staphylobactin. Moreover, we found that transcription from the
sbn
operon was increased, relative to the wild type, in both
sirA
and
sirB
knockout strains, likely in response to an increased level of iron starvation in these cells. These results provide evidence of a role for these proteins in iron import in
S. aureus
and for full fitness of the bacterium in iron-restricted environments and demonstrate a function for
S. aureus
genes encoding proteins involved in the transport of an endogenously produced siderophore.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
97 articles.
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