Literature DB >> 15805523

Surprising dependence on postsegregational killing of host cells for maintenance of the large virulence plasmid of Shigella flexneri.

Sameera Sayeed1, Therese Brendler, Michael Davis, Lucretia Reaves, Stuart Austin.   

Abstract

Low-copy-number plasmids all encode multiple systems to ensure their propagation, including replication, partition (active segregation), and postsegregational killing (PSK) systems. PSK systems kill those rare cells that lose the plasmid due to replication or segregation errors. PSK systems should not be used as the principle means of maintaining the plasmid. The metabolic cost of killing the many cured cells that would arise from random plasmid segregation is far too high. Here we describe an interesting exception to this rule. Maintenance of the large virulence plasmid of Shigella flexneri is highly dependent on one of its PSK systems, mvp, at 37 degrees C, the temperature experienced during pathogenesis. At 37 degrees C, the plasmid is very unstable and mvp efficiently kills the resulting cured bacterial cells. This imposes a major growth disadvantage on the virulent bacterial population. The systems that normally ensure accurate plasmid replication and segregation are attenuated or overridden at 37 degrees C. At 30 degrees C, a temperature encountered by Shigella in the outside environment, the maintenance systems function normally and the plasmid is no longer dependent on mvp. We discuss why the virulent pathogen tolerates this self-destructive method of propagation at the temperature of infection.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 15805523      PMCID: PMC1070380          DOI: 10.1128/JB.187.8.2768-2773.2005

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Bacteriol        ISSN: 0021-9193            Impact factor:   3.490


  20 in total

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