Species- and strain-specific control of a complex, flexible regulon by Bordetella BvgAS.
Publication year
2006Source
Journal of Bacteriology, 188, 5, (2006), pp. 1775-85ISSN
Publication type
Article / Letter to editor
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Organization
Paediatrics - OUD tm 2017
Journal title
Journal of Bacteriology
Volume
vol. 188
Issue
iss. 5
Page start
p. 1775
Page end
p. 85
Subject
N4i 4: Auto-immunity, transplantation and immunotherapy; UMCN 4.1: Microbial pathogenesis and host defenseAbstract
The Bordetella master virulence regulatory system, BvgAS, controls a spectrum of gene expression states, including the virulent Bvg(+) phase, the avirulent Bvg(-) phase, and at least one Bvg-intermediate (Bvg(i)) phase. We set out to define the species- and strain-specific features of this regulon based on global gene expression profiling. Rather than functioning as a switch, Bvg controls a remarkable continuum of gene expression states, with hundreds of genes maximally expressed in intermediate phases between the Bvg(+) and Bvg(-) poles. Comparative analysis of Bvg regulation in B. pertussis and B. bronchiseptica revealed a relatively conserved Bvg(+) phase transcriptional program and identified previously uncharacterized candidate virulence factors. In contrast, control of Bvg(-)- and Bvg(i)-phase genes diverged substantially between species; regulation of metabolic, transporter, and motility loci indicated an increased capacity in B. bronchiseptica, compared to B. pertussis, for ex vivo adaptation. Strain comparisons also demonstrated variation in gene expression patterns within species. Among the genes with the greatest variability in patterns of expression, predicted promoter sequences were nearly identical. Our data suggest that the complement of transcriptional regulators is largely responsible for transcriptional diversity. In support of this hypothesis, many putative transcriptional regulators that were Bvg regulated in B. bronchiseptica were deleted, inactivated, or unregulated by BvgAS in B. pertussis. We propose the concept of a "flexible regulon." This flexible regulon may prove to be important for pathogen evolution and the diversification of host range specificity.
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- Academic publications [243984]
- Electronic publications [130695]
- Faculty of Medical Sciences [92811]
- Open Access publications [104973]
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