| Literature DB >> 28855258 |
Kyung Ku Jang1, Zee-Won Lee1, Bityeoul Kim1, Young Hyun Jung2, Ho Jae Han2, Myung Hee Kim3, Byoung Sik Kim4, Sang Ho Choi5.
Abstract
The marine bacterium Vibrio vulnificus causes food-borne diseases, which may lead to life-threatening septicemia in some individuals. Therefore, identifying virulence factors in V. vulnificus is of high priority. We performed a transcriptome analysis on V. vulnificus after infection of human intestinal HT29-methotrexate cells and found induction of plpA, encoding a putative phospholipase, VvPlpA. Bioinformatics, biochemical, and genetic analyses demonstrated that VvPlpA is a phospholipase A2 secreted in a type II secretion system-dependent manner. Compared with the wild type, the plpA mutant exhibited reduced mortality, systemic infection, and inflammation in mice as well as low cytotoxicity toward the human epithelial INT-407 cells. Moreover, plpA mutation attenuated the release of actin and cytosolic cyclophilin A from INT-407 cells, indicating that VvPlpA is a virulence factor essential for causing lysis and necrotic death of the epithelial cells. plpA transcription was growth phase-dependent, reaching maximum levels during the early stationary phase. Also, transcription factor HlyU and cAMP receptor protein (CRP) mediate additive activation and host-dependent induction of plpA Molecular biological analyses revealed that plpA expression is controlled via the promoter, P plpA , and that HlyU and CRP directly bind to P plpA upstream sequences. Taken together, this study demonstrated that VvPlpA is a type II secretion system-dependent secretory phospholipase A2 regulated by HlyU and CRP and is essential for the pathogenicity of V. vulnificus.Entities:
Keywords: CRP; HlyU; Phospholipase A; PlpA; Vibrio vulnificus; gene regulation; microbial pathogenesis; transcription factor; virulence factor
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28855258 PMCID: PMC5641866 DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M117.791657
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biol Chem ISSN: 0021-9258 Impact factor: 5.157