Affiliation:
1. Wayne State University School of Medicine, Department of Immunology and Microbiology, Detroit, Michigan 48201
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The ability of a pathogen to metabolically adapt to the local environment for optimal expression of virulence determinants is a continued area of research. Orthologs of the
Streptococcus iniae
LysR family regulator CpsY have been shown to regulate methionine biosynthesis and uptake pathways but appear to influence expression of several virulence genes as well. An
S. iniae
mutant with an in-frame deletion of
cpsY
(Δ
cpsY
mutant) is highly attenuated in a zebrafish infection model. The Δ
cpsY
mutant displays a methionine-independent growth defect in serum, which differs from the methionine-dependent defect observed for orthologous mutants of
Streptococcus mutans
and
Streptococcus agalactiae
. On the contrary, the Δ
cpsY
mutant can grow in excess of the wild type (WT) when supplemented with proteose peptone, suggesting an inability to properly regulate growth. CpsY is critical for protection of
S. iniae
from clearance by neutrophils in whole blood but is dispensable for intracellular survival in macrophages. Susceptibility of the Δ
cpsY
mutant to killing in whole blood is not due to a growth defect, because inhibition of neutrophil phagocytosis rescues the mutant to WT levels. Thus, CpsY appears to have a pleiotropic regulatory role for
S. iniae
, integrating metabolism and virulence. Furthermore,
S. iniae
provides a unique model to investigate the paradigm of CpsY-dependent regulation during systemic streptococcal infection.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology
Cited by
18 articles.
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