Affiliation:
1. Istituto Pasteur Italia-Fondazione Cenci Bolognetti, Department of Biology and Biotechnology C. Darwin, Sapienza Università di Roma, Rome, Italy
2. Department of Cell and Molecular Biology, Biomedical Center, Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden
Abstract
ABSTRACT
VirF, an AraC-like activator, is required to trigger a regulatory cascade that initiates the invasive program of
Shigella
spp., the etiological agents of bacillary dysentery in humans. VirF expression is activated upon entry into the host and depends on many environmental signals. Here, we show that the
virF
mRNA is translated into two proteins, the major form, VirF
30
(30 kDa), and the shorter VirF
21
(21 kDa), lacking the N-terminal segment. By site-specific mutagenesis and toeprint analysis, we identified the translation start sites of VirF
30
and VirF
21
and showed that the two different forms of VirF arise from differential translation. Interestingly,
in vitro
and
in vivo
translation experiments showed that VirF
21
is also translated from a leaderless mRNA (llmRNA) whose 5′ end is at position +309/+310, only 1 or 2 nucleotides upstream of the ATG84 start codon of VirF
21
. The llmRNA is transcribed from a gene-internal promoter, which we identified here. Functional analysis revealed that while VirF
30
is responsible for activation of the virulence system, VirF
21
negatively autoregulates
virF
expression itself. Since VirF
21
modulates the intracellular VirF levels, this suggests that transcription of the llmRNA might occur when the onset of the virulence program is not required. We speculate that environmental cues, like stress conditions, may promote changes in
virF
mRNA transcription and preferential translation of llmRNA.
IMPORTANCE
Shigella
spp. are a major cause of dysentery in humans. In bacteria of this genus, the activation of the invasive program involves a multitude of signals that act on all layers of the gene regulatory hierarchy. By controlling the essential genes for host cell invasion, VirF is the key regulator of the switch from the noninvasive to the invasive phenotype. Here, we show that the
Shigella virF
gene encodes two proteins of different sizes, VirF
30
and VirF
21
, that are functionally distinct. The major form, VirF
30
, activates the genes necessary for virulence, whereas the minor VirF
21
, which shares the C-terminal two-thirds of VirF
30
, negatively autoregulates
virF
expression itself. VirF
21
is transcribed from a newly identified gene-internal promoter and, moreover, is translated from an unusual leaderless mRNA. The identification of a new player in regulation adds complexity to the regulation of the
Shigella
invasive process and may help development of new therapies for shigellosis.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Cited by
32 articles.
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