| Literature DB >> 27257952 |
Joshua A Fields1,2, Jiaqi Li1, Connor J Gulbronson3, David R Hendrixson3, Stuart A Thompson1.
Abstract
Campylobacter jejuni infection is a leading bacterial cause of gastroenteritis and a common antecedent leading to Gullian-Barré syndrome. Our previous data suggested that the RNA-binding protein CsrA plays an important role in regulating several important phenotypes including motility, biofilm formation, and oxidative stress resistance. In this study, we compared the proteomes of wild type, csrA mutant, and complemented csrA mutant C. jejuni strains in an effort to elucidate the mechanisms by which CsrA affects virulence phenotypes. The putative CsrA regulon was more pronounced at stationary phase (111 regulated proteins) than at mid-log phase (25 regulated proteins). Proteins displaying altered expression in the csrA mutant included diverse metabolic functions, with roles in amino acid metabolism, TCA cycle, acetate metabolism, and various other cell processes, as well as pathogenesis-associated characteristics such as motility, chemotaxis, oxidative stress resistance, and fibronectin binding. The csrA mutant strain also showed altered autoagglutination kinetics when compared to the wild type. CsrA specifically bound the 5' end of flaA mRNA, and we demonstrated that CsrA is a growth-phase dependent repressor of FlaA expression. Finally, the csrA mutant exhibited reduced ability to colonize in a mouse model when in competition with the wild type, further underscoring the role of CsrA in C. jejuni colonization and pathogenesis.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27257952 PMCID: PMC4892619 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0156932
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Bacterial strains, plasmids, and primers used in this study.
| Strain or Plasmid | Description | Resistance | Source or Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| 81–176 | Wild type | [ | |
| 81–176 | Cm | [ | |
| 81–176 | complemented | Cm, Kan | [ |
| JM109 | Cloning host | Promega | |
| BL21(DE3) | Protein expression strain | Promega | |
| pCRII-TOPO | Cloning vector | Amp, Kan | Invitrogen |
| pET-20b(+) | Protein expression vector | Amp | Novagen |
| pJAF50 | Amp, Kan | This study | |
| pJAF51 | Amp | This study | |
| JAF | This study | ||
| JAF | This study | ||
| JL107 | This study | ||
| JL108 | This study | ||
| | [ | ||
| | [ |
Proteins with altered expression ΔcsrA at mid-log phase.
| Functional category | Altered expression in | |
|---|---|---|
| Higher (9) | Lower (16) | |
| Amino acid | HisD | AnsA |
| Carbohydrate | AcnB | OorA, SucC |
| Energy | NuoG, Ppa | |
| Nucleotide | GuaB | Adk |
| Translation | Tig | EF-P, EF-Tu |
| Folding, sorting, degradation | HtrA, PEB4 | DnaK, GroEL |
| Membrane transport | CjaA | |
| Signal transduction | CosR | |
| Cell motility | FlaA, FlaB | Tlp6 |
| Oxidoreductase | AhpC, TrxB | |
| Hypothetical | Cjj81176_0443, Cjj81176_0107 | |
1KEGG category
Proteins with altered expression ΔcsrA at stationary phase.
| Functional category | Altered expression in | |
|---|---|---|
| Higher (54) | Lower (57) | |
| Amino acid | AnsA, GGT, PEB1a, AspA, GlnH, MetY | PheA, IlvC, IlvE, Asd, ArgG, DapA |
| Carbohydrate | AckA, AcnB, Acs, Cjj81176_0110, FbaA, FumC, Mez, OorA, OorB, OorC, PFOR, Pyk, SucC | AccA, Eno, FrdA, GltA, OorD, Pta, SucD |
| Energy | NuoI | AtpA, AtpD, Cj0414, MfrA, TorA |
| Nucleotide | GuaB | Adk, PurA, PurB |
| Glycan | LpxB, LgtF, WaaF | |
| Cofactors/vitamins | PabB | Cjj81176_0265, CoaE |
| Other secondary metabolites | Cft | |
| Transcription | Rho | |
| Translation | EF-Tu, HisS, RpmB, SerS, Tig | FusA, LepA, RpsA |
| Folding, sorting, degradation | HtrA, PEB4 | FtsH, GroEL, HtpG, MogA |
| Replication and repair | Ogt, RecA, RuvA | |
| Membrane transport | Cjj81176_1525, Cjj81176_1566, ModC, PorA | Cjj81176_0211, PstB |
| Signal transduction | CosR, Fur, RacR | |
| Cell motility | FlaA, FlaB, FliD, PseI, Tlp6, Tlp8 | CheV, CheY |
| Oxidoreductase | Cjj81176_0382 | AhpC, KatA, Tpx, TrxA, TrxB |
| Adhesins | PEB3 | PEB2, CadF, FlpA, Cjj81176_1348 |
| Hypothetical | pVir08, Cjj81176_1382, Cjj81176_1458, Cjj81176_0107, Cjj81176_0176, Cjj81176_1344 | Cjj81176_1215, Cjj81176_0435, Cjj81176_0977, Cjj81176_0792, Cjj81176_0793, Cjj81176_0828, Cjj81176_0443, Cjj81176_0729, Cjj81176_0266, Cjj81176_1062 |
1KEGG category;
2 Known C. jejuni adhesins
Fig 1C. jejuni CsrA regulates FlaA expression by binding to the 5’ end of flaA mRNA.
(A) WT and csrA mutant C. jejuni were diluted to an initial OD600 = 0.1 and grown at 42°C. Cells were removed at 5, 6, 8 and 10 hours, and were used in western blots with antibodies against FlaA. (B) Electrophoretic Mobility Shift Assay (EMSA) analysis was used to assess the interaction between purified C. jejuni CsrA-His6 and the 5’ end of flaA mRNA. Purified CsrA-His6 at concentrations varying from 0–300 nM were incubated with 100 ng of purified 32P-end-labeled RNA corresponding to the 5’ ends of either C. jejuni flaA (top panel) or E. coli phoB (bottom panel) as a control that does not bind CsrA [15]. The positions of bound (B) and free (F) RNA are shown.
Fig 2The kinetics of autoagglutination are altered in the csrA mutant strain.
Static suspensions of C. jejuni wild type, csrA mutant, and complemented csrA mutant strains were incubated and OD600 measurements were taken at 2, 4, 6, and 24 hours. The assay was performed in triplicate on three separate occasions. Statistical significance (p<0.05) is represented by an asterisk. Error bars are present; however, they are too small to be seen.
Fig 3Mutation of csrA does not affect flagellar structure.
Transmission electron microscopy of wild type (top) and csrA mutant (bottom) strains showed that flagellar structure is not affected by the csrA mutation. The bar at the lower right of the figure is 1 μm.
Fig 4CsrA is involved in mouse colonization.
BALB/c-ByJ mice were orally inoculated with a 1:1 mixture of wild type (closed circles) and csrA mutant (open circles) C. jejuni and fecal pellets were collected at 7, 14, and 21 days post-infection for enumeration of wild type and mutant bacteria. The geometric means of colonization of each group are represented by horizontal lines. The limit of detection (represented by a dashed line) was 102 CFU/g.