Affiliation:
1. Center of Marine Biotechnology, University of Maryland Biotechnology Institute, Baltimore, Maryland
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Proteus mirabilis
is a urinary tract pathogen that differentiates from a short swimmer cell to an elongated, highly flagellated swarmer cell. Swarmer cell differentiation parallels an increased expression of several virulence factors, suggesting that both processes are controlled by the same signal. The molecular nature of this signal is not known but is hypothesized to involve the inhibition of flagellar rotation. In this study, data are presented supporting the idea that conditions inhibiting flagellar rotation induce swarmer cell differentiation and implicating a rotating flagellar filament as critical to the sensing mechanism. Mutations in three genes,
fliL
,
fliF
, and
fliG
, encoding components of the flagellar basal body, result in the inappropriate development of swarmer cells in noninducing liquid media or hyperelongated swarmer cells on agar media. The
fliL
mutation was studied in detail. FliL
−
mutants are nonmotile and fail to synthesize flagellin, while complementation of
fliL
restores wild-type cell elongation but not motility. Overexpression of
fliL
+
in wild-type cells prevents swarmer cell differentiation and motility, a result also observed when
P. mirabilis fliL
+
was expressed in
Escherichia coli
. These results suggest that FliL plays a role in swarmer cell differentiation and implicate FliL as critical to transduction of the signal inducing swarmer cell differentiation and virulence gene expression. In concert with this idea, defects in
fliL
up-regulate the expression of two virulence genes,
zapA
and
hpmB
. These results support the hypothesis that
P. mirabilis
ascertains its location in the environment or host by assessing the status of its flagellar motors, which in turn control swarmer cell gene expression.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
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