Affiliation:
1. Institute of Medical Microbiology, University of Zurich, Gloriastr. 32, 8006 Zurich, Switzerland
2. Division of Cellular and Molecular Medicine, St. George's University of London, Cranmer Terrace, London SW17 0RE, United Kingdom
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Transcription of
spa
, encoding the virulence factor protein A in
Staphylococcus aureus
, is tightly controlled by a complex regulatory network, ensuring its temporal expression over growth and at appropriate stages of the infection process. Transcriptomic profiling of XdrA, a DNA-binding protein that is conserved in all
S. aureus
genomes and shares similarity with the XRE family of helix-turn-helix, antitoxin-like proteins, revealed it to be a previously unidentified activator of
spa
transcription. To assess how XdrA fits into the complex web of
spa
regulation, a series of regulatory mutants were constructed; consisting of single, double, triple, and quadruple mutants lacking XdrA and/or the three key regulators previously shown to influence
spa
transcription directly (SarS, SarA, and RNAIII). A series of
lacZ
reporter gene fusions containing nested deletions of the
spa
promoter identified regions influenced by XdrA and the other three regulators. XdrA had almost as strong an activating effect on
spa
as SarS and acted on the same
spa
operator regions as SarS, or closely overlapping regions. All data from microarrays, Northern and Western blot analyses, and reporter gene fusion experiments indicated that XdrA is a major activator of
spa
expression that appears to act directly on the
spa
promoter and not through previously characterized regulators.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
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