Virulence gene repression promotes Listeria monocytogenes systemic infection.
Rita PombinhoAna R VieiraAna CamejoCristel ArchambaudPascale CossartSandra SousaDidier CabanesPublished in: Gut microbes (2020)
The capacity of bacterial pathogens to infect their hosts depends on the tight spatiotemporal regulation of virulence genes. The Listeria monocytogenes (Lm) metal efflux pump repressor CadC is highly expressed during late infection stages, modulating lipoprotein processing and host immune response. Here we investigate the potential of CadC as broad repressor of virulence genes. We show that CadC represses the expression of the bile salt hydrolase impairing Lm resistance to bile. During late infection, in absence of CadC-dependent repression, the constitutive bile salt hydrolase expression induces the overexpression of the cholic acid efflux pump MdrT that is unfavorable to Lm virulence. We establish the CadC regulon and show that CadC represses additional virulence factors activated by σB during colonization of the intestinal lumen. CadC is thus a general repressor that promotes Lm virulence by down-regulating, at late infection stages, genes required for survival in the gastrointestinal tract. This demonstrates for the first time how bacterial pathogens can repurpose regulators to spatiotemporally repress virulence genes and optimize their infectious capacity.
Keyphrases
- antimicrobial resistance
- pseudomonas aeruginosa
- escherichia coli
- staphylococcus aureus
- biofilm formation
- listeria monocytogenes
- genome wide
- immune response
- transcription factor
- gene expression
- cell proliferation
- genome wide analysis
- dendritic cells
- signaling pathway
- risk assessment
- blood brain barrier
- gram negative
- long non coding rna
- inflammatory response