Affiliation:
1. Microbial Pathogenesis and Host Defense Program and Division of Infectious Diseases, Department of Medicine, University of California at San Francisco, San Francisco, California, USA
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Bartonella quintana
is a vector-borne bacterial pathogen that causes fatal disease in humans. During the infectious cycle,
B. quintana
transitions from the hemin-restricted human bloodstream to the hemin-rich body louse vector. Because extracytoplasmic function (ECF) sigma factors often regulate adaptation to environmental changes, we hypothesized that a previously unstudied
B. quintana
ECF sigma factor, RpoE, is involved in the transition from the human host to the body louse vector. The genomic context of
B. quintana
rpoE
identified it as a member of the ECF15 family of sigma factors found only in alphaproteobacteria. ECF15 sigma factors are believed to be the master regulators of the general stress response in alphaproteobacteria. In this study, we examined the
B. quintana
RpoE response to two stressors that are encountered in the body louse vector environment, a decreased temperature and an increased hemin concentration. We determined that the expression of
rpoE
is significantly upregulated at the body louse (28°C) versus the human host (37°C) temperature.
rpoE
expression also was upregulated when
B. quintana
was exposed to high hemin concentrations.
In vitro
and
in vivo
analyses demonstrated that RpoE function is regulated by a mechanism involving the anti-sigma factor NepR and the response regulator PhyR. The Δ
rpoE
Δ
nepR
mutant strain of
B. quintana
established that RpoE-mediated transcription is important in mediating the tolerance of
B. quintana
to high hemin concentrations. We present the first analysis of an ECF15 sigma factor in a vector-borne human pathogen and conclude that RpoE has a role in the adaptation of
B. quintana
to the hemin-rich arthropod vector environment.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
22 articles.
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