Affiliation:
1. Division of Biological Sciences, The University of Montana, Missoula, Montana 59812
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Of all bacteria,
Bartonella quintana
has the highest reported in vitro hemin requirement, yet an explanation for this remains elusive. To produce diseases such as trench fever, endocarditis, and bacillary angiomatosis,
B. quintana
must survive and replicate in the disparate environments of the
Pediculus humanus corporis
(body louse) gut and the human vasculature. We previously identified a five-member family of hemin binding proteins (Hbps) synthesized by
B. quintana
that bind hemin on the outer surface but share no similarity to known bacterial heme receptors. In the present study, we examine the transcription, regulation, and synthesis of this virulence factor family by cultivation of the bacterium in environments that simulate natural heme, oxygen, and temperature conditions encountered in the host and insect vector. First, quantitative real-time PCR data show that
hbpC
expression is regulated by temperature, where a >100-fold increase in transcript quantity was seen at 30°C relative to 37°C, suggesting that HbpC synthesis would be greatest in the cooler temperature of the louse. Second, cultivation at human bloodstream oxygen concentration (5% relative to 21% atmospheric) significantly decreases the transcript quantity of all
hbp
genes, indicating that expression is influenced by O
2
and/or reactive oxygen species. Third, a differential expression pattern within the
hbp
family is revealed when
B. quintana
is grown in a range of hemin concentrations: subgroup I (
hbpC
and
hbpB
) predominates in a simulated louse environment (high heme), and subgroup II (
hbpA
,
hbpD
, and
hbpE
) is preferentially expressed in a simulated human background (low heme). By using two-dimensional sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, immunoblotting, and matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization—time of flight mass spectrometry fingerprinting, we demonstrate that synthesis of HbpA correlates with
hbpA
transcript increases observed at low hemin concentrations. Finally, an
hbpA
promoter-
lacZ
reporter construct in
B. quintana
demonstrates that a transcriptional regulator(s) is controlling the expression of
hbpA
through a
cis
-acting regulatory element located in the
hbpA
promoter region.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology
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