Affiliation:
1. Australian Bacterial Pathogenesis Program, Department of Microbiology, Monash University, Victoria 3800, Australia
2. Unité de Génétique Moléculaire Bactérienne, Institut Pasteur, Paris, France
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The transcriptional regulation of toxin production in the gram-positive anaerobe
Clostridium perfringens
involves a two-component signal transduction system that comprises the VirS sensor histidine kinase and its cognate response regulator, VirR. Previous studies showed that VirR binds independently to a pair of imperfect direct repeats, now designated VirR box 1 and VirR box 2, located immediately upstream of the promoter of the
pfoA
gene, which encodes the cholesterol-dependent cytolysin, perfringolysin O. For this study, we introduced mutated VirR boxes into a
C. perfringens pfoA
mutant and found that both VirR boxes are essential for transcriptional activation. Furthermore, the spacing between the VirR boxes and the distance between the VirR boxes and the −35 region are shown to be critical for perfringolysin O production. Other VirR boxes that were previously identified from the strain 13 genome sequence were also analyzed, with perfringolysin O production used as a reporter system. The results showed that placement of the different VirR boxes at the same position upstream of the
pfoA
promoter yields different levels of perfringolysin O activity. In all of these constructs, VirR was still capable of binding to the target DNA, indicating that DNA binding alone is not sufficient for transcriptional activation. Finally, we show that the
C. perfringens
RNA polymerase binds more efficiently to the
pfoA
promoter in the presence of VirR, indicating that interactions must occur between these proteins. We propose that these interactions are required for VirR-mediated transcriptional activation.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
33 articles.
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