Affiliation:
1. Department of Microbiology, University of Minnesota Medical School, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55455-0312
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Previous research demonstrated that the sympathoadrenal catecholamine norepinephrine could promote the growth of
Bordetella bronchiseptica
in iron-restricted medium containing serum. In this study, norepinephrine was demonstrated to stimulate growth of this organism in the presence of partially iron-saturated transferrin but not lactoferrin. Although norepinephrine is known to induce transcription of the
Bordetella bfeA
enterobactin catechol xenosiderophore receptor gene, neither a
bfeA
mutant nor a
bfeR
regulator mutant was defective in growth responsiveness to norepinephrine. However, growth of a
tonB
mutant strain was not enhanced by norepinephrine, indicating that the response to this catecholamine was the result of high-affinity outer membrane transport. The
B. bronchiseptica
genome encodes a total of 19 known and predicted iron transport receptor genes, none of which, when mutated individually, were found to confer a defect in norepinephrine-mediated growth stimulation in the presence of transferrin. Labeling experiments demonstrated a TonB-dependent increase in cell-associated iron levels when bacteria grown in the presence of
55
Fe-transferrin were exposed to norepinephrine. In addition, TonB was required for maximum levels of cell-associated norepinephrine. Together, these results demonstrate that norepinephrine facilitates
B. bronchiseptica
iron acquisition from the iron carrier protein transferrin and this process may represent a mechanism by which some bacterial pathogens obtain this essential nutrient in the host environment.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
50 articles.
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