Characterizing the flavodoxin landscape in Clostridioides difficile .
Daniel TroitzschRobert KnopSilvia DittmannJürgen BartelDaniela ZühlkeTimon Alexander MöllerLinda TränThaddäus EchelmeyerSusanne SieversPublished in: Microbiology spectrum (2024)
Clostridioides difficile infections have become a major challenge in medical facilities. The bacterium is capable of spore formation allowing the survival of antibiotic treatment. Therefore, research on the physiology of C. difficile is important for the development of alternative treatment strategies. In this study, we investigated eight putative flavodoxins of C. difficile 630. Flavodoxins are small electron transfer proteins of specifically low potential. The unusually high number of flavodoxins in C. difficile suggests that they are expressed under different conditions. We determined high transcription levels for several flavodoxins during the exponential growth phase, especially for floX . Since flavodoxins are capable of replacing ferredoxins under iron deficiency conditions in other bacteria, we also examined their expression in C. difficile under low iron and no iron levels. In particular, the amount of fldX increased with decreasing iron concentration and thus could possibly replace ferredoxins. Moreover, we demonstrated that fldX is increasingly expressed under different oxidative stress conditions and thus may play an important role in the oxidative stress response. While increased fldX expression was detectable at both RNA and protein level, CD2825 showed increased expression only at mRNA level under H 2 O 2 stress with sufficient iron availability and may indicate hydroxyl radical-dependent transcription. Although the exact function of the individual flavodoxins in C. difficile needs to be further investigated, the present study shows that flavodoxins could play an important role in several physiological processes and under infection-relevant conditions.IMPORTANCEThe gram-positive, anaerobic, and spore-forming bacterium Clostridioides difficile has become a vast problem in human health care facilities. The antibiotic-associated infection with this intestinal pathogen causes serious and recurrent inflammation of the intestinal epithelium, in many cases with a severe course. To come up with novel targeted therapies against C. difficile infections, a more detailed knowledge on the pathogen's physiology is mandatory. Eight putative flavodoxins, an extraordinarily high copy number of this type of small electron transfer proteins, are annotated for C. difficile . Flavodoxins are known to be essential electron carriers in other bacteria, for instance, during infection-relevant conditions such as iron limitation and oxidative stress. This work is a first and comprehensive overview on characteristics and expression profiles of the putative flavodoxins in the pathogen C. difficile .
Keyphrases
- clostridium difficile
- oxidative stress
- iron deficiency
- healthcare
- electron transfer
- poor prognosis
- copy number
- binding protein
- dna damage
- endothelial cells
- transcription factor
- gene expression
- microbial community
- multidrug resistant
- dna methylation
- wastewater treatment
- long non coding rna
- early onset
- heavy metals
- mass spectrometry
- induced apoptosis
- health insurance
- heat shock
- free survival
- protein protein
- drug induced
- heat shock protein
- small molecule
- amino acid