Staphylococcus aureus SigS Induces Expression of a Regulatory Protein Pair That Modulates Its mRNA Stability.

biorxiv(2023)

引用 0|浏览5
暂无评分
摘要
SigS is the sole extracytoplasmic function sigma factor in Staphylococcus aureus and is necessary for virulence, immune evasion, and adaptation to toxic chemicals and environmental stressors. Despite the contribution of SigS to a myriad of critical phenotypes, the downstream effectors of SigS-dependent pathogenesis, immune evasion, and stress adaptation remain elusive. To address this knowledge gap, we analyzed the S. aureus transcriptome following transient overexpression of SigS. We identified a bicistronic transcript, upregulated 1,000-fold, containing two midsized genes, each containing single domains of unknown function (DUFs). We renamed these genes igS-egulated () and igS-egulated (). We demonstrated that SigS regulation of the operon is direct by using transcription analysis. Using Northern blot analysis, we also demonstrated that SroA and SroB have opposing autoregulatory functions on the transcriptional architecture of the locus, with SroA stimulating SigS mRNA levels and SroB stimulating s750 (SigS antisense) levels. We hypothesized that these opposing regulatory effects were due to a direct interaction. We subsequently demonstrated a direct interaction between SroA and SroB using an surrogate genetics approach via bacterial adenylate cyclase-based two-hybrid (BACTH) analysis. We demonstrated that the SroA effect on SigS is at the posttranscriptional level of mRNA stability, highlighting a mechanism likely used by S. aureus to tightly control SigS levels. Finally, we demonstrate that the locus promotes virulence in a murine pneumonia model of infection. SigS is necessary for S. aureus virulence, immune evasion, and adaptation to chemical and environmental stressors. These processes are critically important for the ability of S. aureus to cause disease. However, the SigS-dependent transcriptome has not been identified, hindering our ability to identify downstream effectors of SigS that contribute to these pathogenic and adaptive phenotypes. Here, we identify a regulatory protein pair that is a major direct target of SigS, known as SroA and SroB. SroA also acts to stimulate SigS expression at the posttranscriptional level of RNA turnover, providing insight into intrinsically low levels of SigS. The discovery of SroA and SroB increases our understanding of SigS and the S. aureus pathogenesis process.
更多
查看译文
关键词
staphylococcus aureus,regulatory protein pair
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要