Affiliation:
1. Department of Microbiology and Immunology, University of South Alabama College of Medicine, Mobile, Alabama 36688
2. Department of Botany and Microbiology, University of Oklahoma, Norman, Oklahoma 73019
Abstract
ABSTRACT
An important feature of
Escherichia coli
pathogenesis is an ability to withstand extremely acidic environments of pH 2 or lower. This acid resistance property contributes to the low infectious dose of pathogenic
E. coli
species. One very efficient
E. coli
acid resistance system encompasses two isoforms of glutamate decarboxylase (
gadA
and
gadB
) and a putative glutamate:γ-amino butyric acid (GABA) antiporter (
gadC
). The system is subject to complex controls that vary with growth media, growth phase, and growth pH. Previous work has revealed that the system is controlled by two sigma factors, two negative regulators (cyclic AMP receptor protein [CRP] and H-NS), and an AraC-like regulator called GadX. Earlier evidence suggested that the GadX protein acts both as a positive and negative regulator of the
gadA
and
gadBC
genes depending on environmental conditions. New data clarify this finding, revealing a collaborative regulation between GadX and another AraC-like regulator called GadW (previously YhiW). GadX and GadW are DNA binding proteins that form homodimers in vivo and are 42% homologous to each other. GadX activates expression of
gadA
and
gadBC
at any pH, while GadW inhibits GadX-dependent activation. Regulation of
gadA
and
gadBC
by either regulator requires an upstream, 20-bp GAD box sequence. Northern blot analysis further indicates that GadW represses expression of
gadX
. The results suggest a control circuit whereby GadW interacts with both the
gadA
and
gadX
promoters. GadW clearly represses
gadX
and, in situations where GadX is missing, activates
gadA
and
gadBC.
GadX, however, activates only
gadA
and
gadBC
expression. CRP also represses
gadX
expression. It does this primarily by repressing production of sigma S, the sigma factor responsible for
gadX
expression. In fact, the acid induction of
gadA
and
gadBC
observed when rich-medium cultures enter stationary phase corresponds to the acid induction of sigma S production. These complex control circuits impose tight rein over expression of the
gadA
and
gadBC
system yet provide flexibility for inducing acid resistance under many conditions that presage acid stress.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
122 articles.
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