Virulence (Jan 2019)

The Yersinia pseudotuberculosis Cpx envelope stress system contributes to transcriptional activation of rovM

  • Edvin J. Thanikkal,
  • Dharmender K. Gahlot,
  • Junfa Liu,
  • Marcus Fredriksson Sundbom,
  • Jyoti M. Gurung,
  • Kristina Ruuth,
  • Monika K. Francis,
  • Ikenna R. Obi,
  • Karl M. Thompson,
  • Shiyun Chen,
  • Petra Dersch,
  • Matthew S. Francis

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/21505594.2018.1556151
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 1
pp. 37 – 57

Abstract

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The Gram-negative enteropathogen Yersinia pseudotuberculosis possesses a number of regulatory systems that detect cell envelope damage caused by noxious extracytoplasmic stresses. The CpxA sensor kinase and CpxR response regulator two-component regulatory system is one such pathway. Active Cpx signalling upregulates various factors designed to repair and restore cell envelope integrity. Concomitantly, this pathway also down-regulates key determinants of virulence. In Yersinia, cpxA deletion accumulates high levels of phosphorylated CpxR (CpxR~P). Accumulated CpxR~P directly repressed rovA expression and this limited expression of virulence-associated processes. A second transcriptional regulator, RovM, also negatively regulates rovA expression in response to nutrient stress. Hence, this study aimed to determine if CpxR~P can influence rovA expression through control of RovM levels. We determined that the active CpxR~P isoform bound to the promoter of rovM and directly induced its expression, which naturally associated with a concurrent reduction in rovA expression. Site-directed mutagenesis of the CpxR~P binding sequence in the rovM promoter region desensitised rovM expression to CpxR~P. These data suggest that accumulated CpxR~P inversely manipulates the levels of two global transcriptional regulators, RovA and RovM, and this would be expected to have considerable influence on Yersinia pathophysiology and metabolism.

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