| Literature DB >> 17163975 |
Alexandra Sittka1, Verena Pfeiffer, Karsten Tedin, Jörg Vogel.
Abstract
The RNA chaperone, Hfq, plays a diverse role in bacterial physiology beyond its original role as a host factor required for replication of Qbeta RNA bacteriophage. In this study, we show that Hfq is involved in the expression and secretion of virulence factors in the facultative intracellular pathogen, Salmonella typhimurium. A Salmonella hfq deletion strain is highly attenuated in mice after both oral and intraperitoneal infection, and shows a severe defect in invasion of epithelial cells and a growth defect in both epithelial cells and macrophages in vitro. Surprisingly, we find that these phenotypes are largely independent of the previously reported requirement of Hfq for expression of the stationary phase sigma factor, RpoS. Our results implicate Hfq as a key regulator of multiple aspects of virulence including regulation of motility and outer membrane protein (OmpD) expression in addition to invasion and intracellular growth. These pleiotropic effects are suggested to involve a network of regulatory small non-coding RNAs, placing Hfq at the centre of post-transcriptional regulation of virulence gene expression in Salmonella. In addition, the hfq mutation appears to cause a chronic activation of the RpoE-mediated envelope stress response which is likely due to a misregulation of membrane protein expression.Entities:
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Year: 2006 PMID: 17163975 PMCID: PMC1810395 DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2958.2006.05489.x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Microbiol ISSN: 0950-382X Impact factor: 3.501
Fig. 1Details of Salmonella hfq mutants and their growth characteristics. A. Genomic location of hfq in SL1344. The region cloned on complementation plasmid, pStHfq-6H, is indicated. B. Schematic representation of the insertion sites of the cat resistance cassette in the deletion mutant Δhfq, the control strain hfq-C, and the chromosomally HIS-tagged strain, hfqHIS. C and D. Growth and cell viability of hfq mutant strains (open squares: wild-type; filled triangles: hfqHIS; open diamonds: hfq-C; stars: Δhfq). (C) OD600 values of triplicate cultures in LB medium were determined in 45 min intervals. (D) Bacteria were plated to determine viable counts (from triplicate cultures) at an OD of 0.3 and of 2, and 6 h after cultures had reached an OD of 2. E. Complementation of the slight growth defect of the Δhfq strain by plasmid pStHfq-6H (open squares: wild-type strain carrying control plasmid pVP012; stars: Δhfq carrying a control plasmid; filled circles: Δhfq complemented with pStHfq-6H).
Fig. 2The Δhfq mutant is severely attenuated in mice. A. Groups of five Balb/c mice were infected perorally with suspensions of ∼108 bacteria of either the wild-type or Δhfq strains. Bacterial loads in spleen homogenates were determined 72 h post infection. For intraperitoneal infections (B) 1:1 mixtures of both, wild-type and Δhfq strain, each strain at ∼105 bacteria, were used for infections. Forty-eight hours post infection, spleens were removed and the cfu ml−1 for each strain was determined in spleen homogenates by plating to selective plates for calculation of the relative ratios of the two, co-infecting strains (competitive index, CI, see text).
Invasion and intracellular replication (% of the bacterial input).
| Aerobic growth to early stationary phase (OD600 of 2), gentamicin protection assay (HeLa cells) | SPI1-inducing growth conditions, gentamicin protection assay (HeLa cells) | Aerobic growth to early stationary phase (OD600 of 2), macrophage survival assay (RawB) | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Strain/infection time | 2 h | 6 h | 2 h | 6 h | 1 h | 4 h | 24 h |
| wt | 14.16 | 30.38 | 29.4 | 82.11 | 16.53 | 29.79 | 47.48 |
| 7.92 | 14.53 | 13.59 | 41.58 | 5.54 | 10.31 | 18.08 | |
| 4.76 | 19.66 | 15.74 | 38.59 | 4.90 | 12.37 | 15.74 | |
| 0.13 | 0.13 | 3.25 | 6.58 | 0.39 | 0.40 | 3.25 | |
| 0.00 | 0.01 | 0.05 | 0.07 | ND | ND | ND | |
| 8.79 | 22.61 | 22.88 | 65.89 | ND | ND | ND | |
| wt + pCtr | ND | ND | 22.19 | 70.74 | 9.98 | 26.55 | 28.63 |
| ND | ND | 2.35 | 6.29 | 0.54 | 0.57 | 0.67 | |
| ND | ND | 40.87 | 118.38 | 15.16 | 41.21 | 42.24 | |
Fig. 3Altered protein expression in Salmonella Δhfq. SDS-PAGE (10–12% gels) of protein samples of SL1344 wild-type and Δhfq prepared from different growth phases (LOG: logarithmic phase, OD600 of 0.3; ES: early stationary phase, OD600 of 2; LS: late stationary phase, 6 h after cells had reached an OD600 of 2). A. Total protein samples. B. Total protein and periplasmic fractions; samples of a ΔrpoS strain were included as an additional control. C. Secreted protein fractions of early stationary phase bacteria.
Results of 1D and 2D gel analysis of protein patterns of SL1344 wild-type and Δhfq cultures grown to early stationary phase (OD600 = 2).
| Candidate protein | Regulation | Localization | Function | Analysis |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CarA | – | CP | Carbamoyl-phosphate synthetase, glutamine-hydrolysing small subunit | 2D |
| SurA | + | CP | Peptidyl-prolyl | 1D, 2D |
| HtrA | + | PP | Periplasmic serine protease Do, heat shock protein | 1D, 2D |
| PyrH | – | CP | Uridine 5′-monophosphate kinase | 2D |
| Upp | – | CP | uracil phosphoribosyltransferase | 2D |
| YaeT | + | (OM) | Putative outer membrane antigen | 2D |
| GltI | + | PP | ABC transporter periplasmic binding protein; ABC superfamily, glutamate/aspartate transporter | 1D, 2D |
| SucD | – | CP | Succinyl-CoA synthetase, alpha subunit | 2D |
| Pal | + | PP | Tol protein required for outer membrane integrity, uptake of group A colicins, and translocation of phage DNA to cytoplasm | 2D |
| YbgF | – | (PP) | Putative periplasmic protein | 2D |
| Dps | – | CP | Stress response DNA-binding protein; starvation induced resistance to H2O2; DNA protection during starvation protein | 2D |
| CspD | + | CP | Cold shock-like protein CspD; similar to CspA but not cold shock induced | 2D |
| TrxB | – | CP | Thioredoxin reductase; thioredoxin reductase | 2D |
| FabF | – | CP | 3-oxoacyl-[acyl-carrier-protein] synthase II | 2D |
| IcdA | + | CP | Isocitrate dehydrogenase in e14 prophage, specific for NADP+ | 2D |
| PagC | + | OM | PhoP regulated: reduced macrophage survival; virulence membrane protein PagC precursor | 2D |
| STM1254 | – | (OM) | Putative outer membrane lipoprotein | 2D |
| STM1328 | – | (OM) | Putative OMP | 2D |
| AroD | – | CP | 3-Dehydroquinate dehydratase | 2D |
| LppB | – | OM | Putative methyl-accepting chemotaxis protein; major outer membrane lipoprotein | 2D |
| LppA | – | OM | Murein lipoprotein, links outer and inner membranes; major outer membrane lipoprotein | 2D |
| YnaF | – | CP | Putative universal stress protein | 2D |
| Tpx | + | CP | Thiol peroxidase | 2D |
| TrpB | – | CP | Tryptophan synthase beta chain | 2D |
| OppA | + | PP | ABC superfamily, oligopeptide transport protein with chaperone properties | 1D, 2D |
| KdsA | – | CP | 3-deoxy-D-manno-octulosonic acid 8-P synthetase | 2D |
| PrsA | – | CP | Phosphoribosylpyrophosphate synthetase | 2D |
| FliC | – | OM/SUP | Flagellin, filament structural protein | 2D |
| Gnd | – | CP | Gluconate 6-phosphate dehydrogenase, decarboxylating | 2D |
| GlpQ | + | PP | Glycerophosphodiester phosphodiesterase, periplasmic | 1D, 2D |
| AckA | – | CP | Acetate kinase A (propionate kinase 2) | 2D |
| HisJ | – | PP | ABC superfamily, histidine-binding periplasmic protein | 2D |
| CysP | + | PP | ABC superfamily, thiosulphate transport protein | 2D |
| MaeB | + | CP | Paral putative transferase; phosphate acetyltransferase | 2D |
| NlpB | + | OM | Lipoprotein-34 | 2D |
| STM2494 | + | (IM) | Putative inner membrane or exported | 2D |
| NifU | – | CP | NifU homologue involved in Fe-S cluster formation | 2D |
| YfiA | – | CP | ribosome associated factor, stabilizes ribosomes against dissociation; putative sigma(54) modulation protein | 2D |
| LuxS | – | CP | Quorum sensing protein, produces autoinducer – acyl-homoserine lactone-signalling molecules | 2D |
| SipA | – | SUP | Cell invasion protein | 2D |
| SipC | – | SUP | Cell invasion protein | 2D |
| GudD | – | CP | 2D | |
| Ptr | + | PP | Protease III | 2D |
| OmpX | –/+ | OM | Ail and ompX homologue; outer membrane protein X precursor | 2D |
| YraP | + | (PP) | Paral putative periplasmic protein; possible lipoprotein | 2D |
| RbfA | – | CP | Ribosome-binding factor, role in processing of 10S rRNA | 2D |
| GreA | + | CP | Transcription elongation factor, cleaves 3′ nucleotide of paused mRNA | 2D |
| Mdh | –/+ | CP | Malate dehydrogenase | 2D |
| AccB | + | CP | acetyl-CoA carboxylase, BCCP subunit, biotin carboxyl carrier protein | 2D |
| FkpA | + | CP | FKBP-type peptidyl-prolyl | 2D |
| DppA | + | PP | ABC superfamily, dipeptide transport protein | 1D, 2D |
| YiaD | + | (OM) | Putative outer membrane lipoprotein | 2D |
| Kbl | – | CP | 2-amino-3-ketobutyrate CoA ligase (glycine acetyltransferase) | 2D |
| PstS | + | PP | ABC superfamily, high-affinity phosphate transporter | 2D |
| RbsB | + | PP | ABC superfamily, | 2D |
| FadA | – | CP | 3-ketoacyl-CoA thiolase (thiolase I, acetyl-CoA transferase), small (beta) subunit of the fatty acid-oxidizing multienzyme complex | 2D |
| RplL | – | CP | 50S ribosomal subunit protein L7/L12 | 2D |
| MalE | – | PP | ABC superfamily maltose transport protein, substrate recognition for transport and chemotaxis | 2D |
| AphA | + | PP | Non-specific acid phosphatase/phosphotransferase, class B | 2D |
| OsmY | – | PP | Hyperosmotically inducible periplasmic protein, RpoS-dependent stationary phase gene | 2D |
| Tsf | + | CP | Protein chain elongation factor EF-Ts | 1D |
| CyoA | + | IM | Cytochrome o ubiquinol oxidase subunit II | 1D |
| YbfM | + | (OM) | Putative OMP | 1D |
| GlnH | + | PP | ABC superfamily (bind_prot), glutamine high-affinity transporter | 1D |
| OmpF | + | OM | OMP 1a (ia; b; f), porin | 1D |
| MglB | + | PP | ABC superfamily (peri_perm), galactose transport protein | 1D |
| STM2786 | + | PP | Tricarboxylic transport | 1D |
| RpsD | – | CP | 30S ribosomal subunit protein S4 | 1D |
| RplC | – | CP | 50S ribosomal subunit protein L3 | 1D |
| GlpK | + | CP | Glycerol kinase | 1D |
| TufB | – | CP | Protein chain elongation factor EF-Tu (duplicate of tufA) | 1D |
Nomenclature according to coliBASE (http://colibase.bham.ac.uk/; Chaudhuri ).
Up- or downregulation in hfq strain as compared with SL1344.
Predicted subcellular protein localization: CP, cytoplasmic; PP, periplasmic; OM, outer membrane; IM, inner membrane; SUP, secreted.
Functional classification according to KEGG (http://www.genome.jp/kegg/; Goto ).
Protein identified on one-dimensional (1D) or two-dimensional (2D) gel.
See Table S1 for further details.
Fig. 5SPI1-inducing conditions restore effector levels and their secretion in the Δhfq strain. A. Comparison of secreted proteins of wild-type, Δhfq, Δspi1 and ΔrpoS grown for 12 h under standard conditions (lanes 1–4) or SPI1-inducing conditions (lanes 5–8) by SDS-PAGE analysis. B. Western blot detection of effector and needle proteins in total protein samples and secreted fractions of bacteria grown for 12 h under SPI1-inducing conditions. Bacterial strains from left to right: wild-type, Δhfq, Δspi1.
Fig. 4The hfq deletion mutant is impaired in HilA expression and shows reduced effector levels. A. HilA levels in wild-type and Δhfq Salmonella grown to early stationary phase. Shown are Western blots probed for chromosomally encoded HilAFLAG protein (left panel), or HilAmyc protein as expressed from pBAD-HilA expression plasmid (right panel). Bacteria carrying the empty pBAD vector were included as control. B. hilA promoter activity determined with a transcriptional hilA-gfp fusion in early stationary phase (P), and hilA mRNA levels as determined by Northern analysis. Given are relative values obtained for Δhfq, with the levels determined for the wild-type strain set to 100%. C. Western blot detection of effector and needle proteins in total protein samples and secreted fractions of bacteria grown to early stationary phase. Bacterial strains from left to right: wild-type, Δspi1, wild-type strain carrying a pBAD control vector, wild-type strain carrying a pBAD-HilA expression plasmid, Δhfq carrying a pBAD control vector, Δhfq with pBAD-HilA expression plasmid. All strains were grown in LB medium complemented with 0.05% l-arabinose to facilitate HilA expression from plasmid pBAD-HilA.
Quantification of Hfq-dependent gene expression.
| Relative mRNA levels | Relative transcriptional/translational fusion activity | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Gene/OD600 | 0.3 | 2 | 2 |
| −1.6 | −6 | ND | |
| 1.7 | 1.6 | 0.84/1.1 | |
| 1.7 | 1.4 | 0.82/2.5 | |
| PLtetO- | ND | ND | 1.0 |
Fold change of mRNA levels in hfq strain as compared with SL1344 as determined by Northern hybridization.
Fold change of GFP reporter fusion activity in hfq strain as compared with SL1344.
Fig. 6The Δhfq strain is non-motile. A. Northern blot detection of fliC mRNA levels in wild-type and Δhfq cells at logarithmic and early stationary phase before and within 32 min after rifampicin treatment. Densitometry of the Northern blot signals showed that the fliC mRNA decays with the same half-life in both genetic backgrounds (∼9 min or ∼7 min in logarithmic or early stationary phase cultures respectively). 5S signals are shown as loading control. B. To measure motility, equal numbers of bacteria from each strain were inoculated onto a motility agar-plate. The image was obtained following 4 h of incubation at 37°C.
Fig. 7Hfq is essential for growth rate-dependent repression of OmpD. A. SDS-PAGE analysis of total protein prepared from wild-type, Δhfq, ΔompD and Δhfq/ΔompD bacteria grown to early stationary phase. OmpD protein levels as quantified by fluorescent staining (not shown) are given below each lane. B. Northern blot detection of ompC and ompD mRNA levels of wild-type and Δhfq bacteria grown to either logarithmic or early stationary phase prior to (0 min) and within 32 min of rifampicin treatment. 5S sRNA probing (loading control) is shown below each panel. C. Decay of ompC and ompD mRNA upon rifampicin treatment as derived from quantification of the Northern blot signals shown in (B). Logarithmic phase, wild-type (filled circles) or Δhfq (open circles); early stationary phase, wild-type (filled squares) or Δhfq (open squares). D. Hfq binds to ompD 5′ UTR RNA in vitro (gel mobility shift assay). Left panel: 1 nM of 32P-labelled ompD was incubated with increasing concentrations of Hfq protein (given above the lanes). Following a 15 min incubation at 37°C samples were run on a native 6% gel. Shown is an autoradiograph of the gel. A control gel shift assay with an Hfq-independent RNA derived from the metK 5′ UTR is shown in the right panel.
Fig. 8Summary of phenotypes of the Salmonella hfq mutation determined in this study.
Strains and plasmids used in this study.
| Strain | Relevant markers/genotype | Reference/source |
|---|---|---|
| SL1344 | StrR | |
| JVS-00255 | SL1344 Δ | This study |
| JVS-00177 | SL1344 | This study |
| JVS-00179 | SL1344 | This study |
| JVS-00756 | SL1344 | This study |
| JVS-00405 | SL1344 Δ | S. Pätzold, MPI-IB Berlin (unpublished) |
| JVS-00748 | SL1344 Δ | |
| JVS-00584 | SL1344 Δ | This study |
| JVS-00735 | SL1344 Δ | This study |
| JVS-00822 | SL1344 Δ | This study |
| TOP10 | Invitrogen | |
| TOP10F′ | F′{ | Invitrogen |
| ER 2566 | F–λ– | New England Biolabs |
Plasmids used in this study.
| Name | Fragment | Comment | Origin/marker | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| pJV300 | ColE1 control plasmid, based on pZE12-luc, PLlacO promoter transcribes a ∼50 nt nonsense transcript ( | ColE1/AmpR | This study | |
| pJV859-8 | PLtetO- | GFP control plasmid (constitutive GFP expression) | pSC101*/CmR | |
| pJV968-1 | ‘ | ColE control plasmid, carries 1.5 kb internal | ColE1/AmpR | |
| pVP003 | Control plasmid; low-copy version of pZE12-luc | pSC101*/AmpR | This study | |
| pVP004-1 | pStHfq-6H, expresses a HIS-tagged Hfq under control of its own promoter; includes 1014 bp upstream of | pSC101*/AmpR | This study | |
| pVP009 | Low-copy version of control plasmid pJV300 | pSC101*/AmpR | This study | |
| pVP012 | ‘ | Low-copy version of control plasmid pJV968-1 | pSC101*/AmpR | This study |
| pVP019 | This study | |||
| pVP020 | This study | |||
| pAS009 | Overexpression plasmid of | M13/AmpR | This study | |
| pAS0046 | Transcriptional fusions plasmid, based on pJV859-8 | pSC101*/CmR | This study | |
| pAS0047-2 | P | pSC101*/CmR | This study | |
| pAS0057-1 | P | pSC101*/CmR | This study | |
| pAS0058-1 | P | pSC101*/CmR | This study | |
| pJU004 | GFP control plasmid | pSC101*/CmR | ||
| pBAD/ | pBAD control plasmid | pBR322/AmpR | Invitrogen | |
| pZS*24-MCS1 | General expression vector | pSC101*/KmR | ||
| pBAD 18-Kn | pBAD control plasmid | pBR322/KmR | ||
| pCH112 | PBAD- | pHilA; | pBR322/AmpR | |
| pKD3 | Template for mutant construction; carries chloramphenicol cassette | oriRγ/AmpR | ||
| pKD4 | Template for mutant construction; carries kanamycin cassette | oriRγ/AmpR | ||
| pKD46 | ParaB- | Temperature sensitive | oriR101/AmpR | |
| pCP20 | Temperature sensitive FLP recombinase expression plasmid | oriR101/AmpR, CmR | ||
| pSUB11 | Template for mutant construction; 3xFLAG linked to a KmR cassette | R6KoriV, AmpR | ||
| pZA31-luc | General expression plasmid | p15A/CmR | ||
| pZE12-luc | General expression plasmid | ColE1/AmpR | ||
| pTYB-11 | Protein overexpression plasmid (IMPACT-CN system) | M13/AmpR | NEB |