Affiliation:
1. Department of Biochemistry, School of Dental Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Abstract
ABSTRACT
LuxS is responsible for the production of autoinducer 2 (AI-2), which functions in
Vibrio harveyi
as a quorum-sensing signal that controls the cell density-dependent expression of the
lux
operon. In nonluminescent organisms, the physiologic role of AI-2 is not clear. We report that inactivation of
luxS
in
Actinobacillus actinomycetemcomitans
JP2 results in reduced growth of the mutant, but not the wild-type organism, under aerobic, iron-limited conditions. Stunted cultures of the
luxS
mutant
A. actinomycetemcomitans
JP2-12 grew to high cell density when subcultured under iron-replete conditions. In addition, the mutant strain grew to high cell density under iron limitation after transformation with a plasmid containing a functional copy of
luxS.
Results of real-time PCR showed that
A. actinomycetemcomitans
JP2-12 exhibited significantly reduced expression of
afuA
(eightfold),
fecBCDE
(10-fold), and
ftnAB
(>50-fold), which encode a periplasmic ferric transport protein, a putative ferric citrate transporter, and ferritin, respectively. The expressions of putative receptors for transferrin, hemoglobin, and hemophore binding protein were also reduced at more modest levels (two- to threefold). In contrast, expressions of
sidD
and
frpB
(encoding putative siderophore receptors) were increased 10- and 3-fold, respectively, in the
luxS
mutant. To better understand the mechanism of the AI-2 response, the
A. actinomycetemcomitans
genome was searched for homologs of the
V. harveyi
signal transduction proteins, LuxP, LuxQ, LuxU, and LuxO. Interestingly, ArcB was found to be most similar to LuxQ sensor/kinase. To determine whether
arcB
plays a role in the response of
A. actinomycetemcomitans
to AI-2, an
arcB
-deficient mutant was constructed. The isogenic
arcB
mutant grew poorly under anaerobic conditions but grew normally under aerobic iron-replete conditions. However, the
arcB
mutant failed to grow aerobically under iron limitation, and reverse transcriptase PCR showed that inactivation of
arcB
resulted in decreased expression of
afuA
and
ftnAB
. Thus, isogenic
luxS
and
arcB
mutants of
A. actinomycetemcomitans
exhibit similar phenotypes when cultured aerobically under iron limitation, and both mutants exhibit reduced expression of a common set of genes involved in the transport and storage of iron. These results suggest that LuxS and ArcB may act in concert to control the adaptation of
A. actinomycetemcomitans
to iron-limiting conditions and its growth under such conditions.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology
Cited by
87 articles.
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