SlyA regulates virulence gene expressions through activation of pchA regulatory gene in enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli

Riho Hamamura,Hilo Yen,Toru Tobe

Microbiology and Immunology(2022)

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Abstract
SlyA is a DNA-binding protein that alters the nucleoid complex composed of histone-like nucleoid-structuring protein (H-NS) and activates gene expression. In enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli (EHEC), the expression of virulence genes is repressed by H-NS but is up-regulated in response to environmental factors by releasing a nucleoid complex. This study examined the effect of slyA deletion mutation in EHEC and discovered that the production of the locus of enterocyte effacement (LEE)-encoded EspB and Tir, as well as the cell adherence ability, was reduced in the mutant compared with the wild type. The promoter activity of the LEE1 operon, including the regulatory gene, ler, was reduced by slyA mutation, but tac promoter-controlled expression of pchA, which is a regulatory gene of LEE1, abolished the effect. The promoter activity of pchA was down-regulated by the slyA mutation. Furthermore, the coding region was required for its regulation and was bound to SlyA, which indicates the direct regulation of pchA by SlyA. However, the slyA mutation did not affect the butyrate-induced increase in pchA promoter activity. Additionally, the pchA promoter activity was increased via induction of lrp, a regulatory gene for butyrate response, in the slyA mutant and, conversely, by introducing high copies of slyA into the lrp mutant. These results indicate that SlyA is a positive regulator of pchA and is independent of the Lrp regulatory system. SlyA may be involved in the virulence expression in EHEC, maintaining a certain level of expression in the absence of a butyrate response.
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Key words
virulence gene expressions,slya,regulatory gene
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