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Activation of the Listeria monocytogenes Virulence Program by a Reducing Environment

Upon entry into the host cell cytosol, the facultative intracellular pathogen coordinates the expression of numerous essential virulence factors by allosteric binding of glutathione (GSH) to the Crp-Fnr family transcriptional regulator PrfA. Here, we report that robust virulence gene expression can...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:mBio 2017-10, Vol.8 (5)
Main Authors: Portman, Jonathan L, Dubensky, Samuel B, Peterson, Bret N, Whiteley, Aaron T, Portnoy, Daniel A
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Upon entry into the host cell cytosol, the facultative intracellular pathogen coordinates the expression of numerous essential virulence factors by allosteric binding of glutathione (GSH) to the Crp-Fnr family transcriptional regulator PrfA. Here, we report that robust virulence gene expression can be recapitulated by growing bacteria in a synthetic medium containing GSH or other chemical reducing agents. Bacteria grown under these conditions were 45-fold more virulent in an acute murine infection model and conferred greater immunity to a subsequent lethal challenge than bacteria grown in conventional media. During cultivation , PrfA activation was completely dependent on the intracellular levels of GSH, as a glutathione synthase mutant (Δ ) was activated by exogenous GSH but not reducing agents. PrfA activation was repressed in a synthetic medium supplemented with oligopeptides, but the repression was relieved by stimulation of the stringent response. These data suggest that cytosolic interprets a combination of metabolic and redox cues as a signal to initiate robust virulence gene expression Intracellular pathogens are responsible for much of the worldwide morbidity and mortality from infectious diseases. These pathogens have evolved various strategies to proliferate within individual cells of the host and avoid the host immune response. Through cellular invasion or the use of specialized secretion machinery, all intracellular pathogens must access the host cell cytosol to establish their replicative niches. Determining how these pathogens sense and respond to the intracellular compartment to establish a successful infection is critical to our basic understanding of the pathogenesis of each organism and for the rational design of therapeutic interventions. is a model intracellular pathogen with robust and infection models. Studies of the host-sensing and downstream signaling mechanisms evolved by often describe themes of pathogenesis that are broadly applicable to less tractable pathogens. Here, we describe how bacteria use external redox states as a cue to activate virulence.
ISSN:2161-2129
2150-7511
DOI:10.1128/mBio.01595-17