Affiliation:
1. Department of Pathology, Microbiology, and Immunology, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Nashville, Tennessee, USA
2. Faculty of Life Sciences, Department of Veterinary Disease Biology, University of Copenhagen, Frederiksberg C, Denmark
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Protein turnover is a key process for bacterial survival mediated by intracellular proteases. Proteolytic degradation reduces the levels of unfolded and misfolded peptides that accumulate in the cell during stress conditions. Three intracellular proteases, ClpP, HslV, and FtsH, have been identified in the Gram-positive bacterium
Staphylococcus aureus
, a pathogen responsible for significant morbidity and mortality worldwide. Consistent with their crucial role in protein turnover, ClpP, HslV, and FtsH affect a number of cellular processes, including metabolism, stress responses, and virulence. The ClpP protease is believed to be the principal degradation machinery in
S. aureus
. This study sought to identify the effect of the Clp protease on the
i
ron-regulated
s
urface
d
eterminant (Isd) system, which extracts heme-iron from host hemoglobin during infection and is critical to
S. aureus
pathogenesis. Inactivation of components of the Clp protease alters abundance of several Isd proteins, including the hemoglobin receptor IsdB. Furthermore, the observed changes in IsdB abundance are the result of transcriptional regulation, since transcription of
isdB
is decreased by
clpP
or
clpX
inactivation. In contrast, inactivation of
clpC
enhances
isdB
transcription and protein abundance. Loss of
clpP
or
clpX
impairs host hemoglobin binding and utilization and results in severe virulence defects in a systemic mouse model of infection. These findings suggest that the Clp proteolytic system is important for regulating nutrient iron acquisition in
S. aureus
. The Clp protease and Isd complex are widely conserved in bacteria; therefore, these data reveal a novel Clp-dependent regulation pathway that may be present in other bacterial pathogens.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology