Affiliation:
1. Department of Veterinary Biosciences, College of Veterinary Medicine, The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio, USA
Abstract
ABSTRACT
How the obligatory intracellular bacterium
Ehrlichia chaffeensis
begins to replicate upon entry into human monocytes is poorly understood. Here, we examined the potential role of amino acids in initiating intracellular replication. PutA converts proline to glutamate, and GlnA converts glutamate to glutamine.
E. chaffeensis
PutA and GlnA complemented
Escherichia coli
putA
and
glnA
mutants. Methionine sulfoximine, a glutamine synthetase inhibitor, inhibited
E. chaffeensis
GlnA activity and
E. chaffeensis
infection of human cells. Incubation of
E. chaffeensis
with human cells rapidly induced
putA
and
glnA
expression that peaked at 24 h postincubation.
E. chaffeensis
took up proline and glutamine but not glutamate. Pretreatment of
E. chaffeensis
with a proline transporter inhibitor (protamine), a glutamine transporter inhibitor (histidine), or proline analogs inhibited
E. chaffeensis
infection, whereas pretreatment with proline or glutamine enhanced infection and upregulated
putA
and
glnA
faster than no treatment or glutamate pretreatment. The temporal response of
putA
and
glnA
expression was similar to that of NtrY and NtrX, a two-component system, and electrophoretic mobility shift assays showed specific binding of recombinant
E. chaffeensis
NtrX (rNtrX) to the promoter regions of
E. chaffeensis putA
and
glnA
. Furthermore, rNtrX transactivated
E. chaffeensis putA
and
glnA
promoter-
lacZ
fusions in
E. coli
. Growth-promoting activities of proline and glutamine were also accompanied by rapid degradation of the DNA-binding protein CtrA. Our results suggest that proline and glutamine uptake regulates
putA
and
glnA
expression through NtrY/NtrX and facilitates degradation of CtrA to initiate a new cycle of
E. chaffeensis
growth.
IMPORTANCE
Human monocytic ehrlichiosis (HME) is one of the most prevalent, life-threatening emerging infectious zoonoses in the United States. HME is caused by infection with
E. chaffeensis
, an obligatory intracellular bacterium in the order
Rickettsiales
, which includes several category B/C pathogens, such as those causing Rocky Mountain spotted fever and epidemic typhus. The limited understanding of the mechanisms that control bacterial growth within eukaryotic cells continues to impede the identification of new therapeutic targets against rickettsial diseases. Extracellular rickettsia cannot replicate, but rickettsial replication ensues upon entry into eukaryotic host cells. Our findings will provide insights into a novel mechanism of the two-component system that regulates
E. chaffeensis
growth initiation in human monocytes. The result is also important because little is known about the NtrY/NtrX two-component system in any bacteria, let alone obligatory intracellular bacteria. Our findings will advance the field’s current conceptual paradigm on regulation of obligatory intracellular nutrition, metabolism, and growth.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Cited by
35 articles.
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