PLoS Biology (Apr 2022)

The expression of virulence genes increases membrane permeability and sensitivity to envelope stress in Salmonella Typhimurium.

  • Malgorzata Sobota,
  • Pilar Natalia Rodilla Ramirez,
  • Alexander Cambré,
  • Andrea Rocker,
  • Julien Mortier,
  • Théo Gervais,
  • Tiphaine Haas,
  • Delphine Cornillet,
  • Dany Chauvin,
  • Isabelle Hug,
  • Thomas Julou,
  • Abram Aertsen,
  • Médéric Diard

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.3001608
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20, no. 4
p. e3001608

Abstract

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Virulence gene expression can represent a substantial fitness cost to pathogenic bacteria. In the model entero-pathogen Salmonella Typhimurium (S.Tm), such cost favors emergence of attenuated variants during infections that harbor mutations in transcriptional activators of virulence genes (e.g., hilD and hilC). Therefore, understanding the cost of virulence and how it relates to virulence regulation could allow the identification and modulation of ecological factors to drive the evolution of S.Tm toward attenuation. In this study, investigations of membrane status and stress resistance demonstrate that the wild-type (WT) expression level of virulence factors embedded in the envelope increases membrane permeability and sensitizes S.Tm to membrane stress. This is independent from a previously described growth defect associated with virulence gene expression in S.Tm. Pretreating the bacteria with sublethal stress inhibited virulence expression and increased stress resistance. This trade-off between virulence and stress resistance could explain the repression of virulence expression in response to harsh environments in S.Tm. Moreover, we show that virulence-associated stress sensitivity is a burden during infection in mice, contributing to the inherent instability of S.Tm virulence. As most bacterial pathogens critically rely on deploying virulence factors in their membrane, our findings could have a broad impact toward the development of antivirulence strategies.