Affiliation:
1. Center for Molecular and Translational Human Infectious Diseases Research, The Methodist Hospital Research Institute, Houston, Texas 77030
2. Department of Infectious Diseases, M. D. Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, Texas 77030
Abstract
ABSTRACT
To colonize and cause disease at distinct anatomical sites, bacterial pathogens must tailor gene expression in a microenvironment-specific manner. The molecular mechanisms that control the ability of the human bacterial pathogen group A
Streptococcus
(GAS) to transition between infection sites have yet to be fully elucidated. A key regulator of GAS virulence gene expression is the CovR-CovS two-component regulatory system (also known as CsrR-CsrS).
covR
and
covS
mutant strains arise spontaneously during invasive infections and, in in vivo models of infection, rapidly become dominant. Here, we compared wild-type GAS with
covR
,
covS
, and
covRS
isogenic mutant strains to investigate the heterogeneity in the types of natural mutations that occur in
covR
and
covS
and the phenotypic consequences of
covR
or
covS
mutation. We found that the response regulator CovR retains some regulatory function in the absence of CovS and that CovS modulates CovR to significantly enhance repression of one group of genes (e.g., the
speA
,
hasA
, and
ska
genes) while it reduces repression of a second group of genes (e.g., the
speB
,
grab
, and
spd3
genes). We also found that different in vivo-induced
covR
mutations can lead to strikingly different transcriptomes. While
covS
mutant strains show increased virulence in several invasive models of infection, we determined that these mutants are significantly outcompeted by wild-type GAS during growth in human saliva, an ex vivo model of upper respiratory tract infection. We propose that CovS-mediated regulation of CovR activity plays an important role in the ability of GAS to cycle between pharyngeal and invasive infections.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology
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