Affiliation:
1. Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, Georgia 30322
Abstract
ABSTRACT
A search for homologs of the
Bacillus subtilis
PhoP response regulator in the group A streptococcus (GAS) genome revealed three good candidates. Inactivation of one of these, recently identified as
csrR
(J. C. Levin and M. R. Wessels, Mol. Microbiol. 30:209–219, 1998), caused the strain to produce mucoid colonies and to increase transcription of
hasA
, the first gene in the operon for capsule synthesis. We report here that a nonpolar insertion in this gene also increased transcription of
ska
(encoding streptokinase),
sagA
(streptolysin S), and
speMF
(mitogenic factor) but did not affect transcription of
slo
(streptolysin O),
mga
(multiple gene regulator of GAS),
emm
(M protein),
scpA
(complement C5a peptidase), or
speB
or
speC
(pyrogenic exotoxins B and C). The amounts of streptokinase, streptolysin S, and capsule paralleled the levels of transcription of their genes in all cases. Because CsrR represses genes unrelated to those for capsule synthesis, and because CsrA-CsrB is a global regulatory system in
Escherichia coli
whose mechanism is unrelated to that of these genes in GAS, the locus has been renamed
covR
, for “control of virulence genes” in GAS. Transcription of the
covR
operon was also increased in the nonpolar insertion mutant, indicating that CovR represses its own synthesis as well. All phenotypes of the
covR
nonpolar insertion mutant were complemented by the
covR
gene on a plasmid. CovR acts on operons expressed both in exponential and in stationary phase, demonstrating that the CovR-CovS pathway is separate from growth phase-dependent regulation in GAS. Therefore, CovR is the first multiple-gene repressor of virulence factors described for this important human pathogen.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
247 articles.
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