Abstract
ABSTRACTThe toxigenicKlebsiella oxytocastrains secret the tilivalline enterotoxin, which causes antibiotic-associated hemorrhagic colitis. The tilivalline is a non-ribosomal peptide synthesized by enzymes encoded in two divergent operons clustered in a pathogenicity island. The transcriptional regulator Lrp (leucine-responsiveregulatoryprotein) controls the expression of several bacterial genes involved in virulence. In this work, we determined the transcriptional expression ofaroXandnpsA, the first genes of each tilivalline biosynthetic operon inK. oxytocaMIT 09-7231 wild-type and its derivatives Δlrpmutant and complemented strains. The results show that Lrp directly activates the transcription of botharoXandnpsAgenes by binding to the intergenic regulatory region in a leucine-dependent manner. Furthermore, the lack of Lrp significantly diminished the cytotoxicity ofK. oxytocaon HeLa cells due to tilivalline reduced production. Altogether, our data highlight Lrp as a new regulator by which cytotoxin-producingK. oxytocastrains control the expression of genes involved in the biosynthesis of their main virulence factor.IMPORTANCETilivalline is an enterotoxin that is a hallmark for the cytotoxin-producingK. oxytocastrains, which cause antibiotic-associated hemorrhagic colitis. The biosynthesis of tilivalline is driven by enzymes encoded by thearoX- and NRPS-operons. In this study, we discovered that the transcriptional regulator Lrp directly activates expression of thearoX- and NRPS-operons and, in turn, tilivalline biosynthesis. Our results underscore a molecular mechanism by which tilivalline production by toxigenicK. oxytocastrains is regulated and shed further light on developing strategies to prevent the intestinal illness caused by this enteric pathogen.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory