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Helicobacter pylori AlpA and AlpB bind host laminin and influence gastric inflammation in gerbils. Infect Immun 2011; 79:3106-16. [PMID: 21576328 DOI: 10.1128/iai.01275-10] [Citation(s) in RCA: 75] [Impact Index Per Article: 5.8] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 12/16/2022] Open
Abstract
Helicobacter pylori persistently colonizes humans, causing gastritis, ulcers, and gastric cancer. Adherence to the gastric epithelium has been shown to enhance inflammation, yet only a few H. pylori adhesins have been paired with targets in host tissue. The alpAB locus has been reported to encode adhesins involved in adherence to human gastric tissue. We report that abrogation of H. pylori AlpA and AlpB reduces binding of H. pylori to laminin while expression of plasmid-borne alpA or alpB confers laminin-binding ability to Escherichia coli. An H. pylori strain lacking only AlpB is also deficient in laminin binding. Thus, we conclude that both AlpA and AlpB contribute to H. pylori laminin binding. Contrary to expectations, the H. pylori SS1 mutant deficient in AlpA and AlpB causes more severe inflammation than the isogenic wild-type strain in gerbils. Identification of laminin as the target of AlpA and AlpB will facilitate future investigations of host-pathogen interactions occurring during H. pylori infection.
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Raghavan V, Groisman EA. Orphan and hybrid two-component system proteins in health and disease. Curr Opin Microbiol 2010; 13:226-31. [PMID: 20089442 DOI: 10.1016/j.mib.2009.12.010] [Citation(s) in RCA: 37] [Impact Index Per Article: 2.6] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 12/01/2009] [Revised: 12/24/2009] [Accepted: 12/28/2009] [Indexed: 11/17/2022]
Abstract
Bacterial interaction with eukaryotic hosts is often mediated by classical two-component systems, where a sensor kinase controls the phosphorylated state of a cognate response regulator directly, as well as by atypical two-component systems. In the gut symbiont Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron, the sensor kinase and response regulator domains are fused into a single polypeptide, resulting in a membrane-bound regulator usually directing expression of enzymes that degrade certain sugars, making them digestible for humans. In the opportunistic pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa, a sensor kinase alters disease expression programs by binding to and altering the enzymatic properties of a different sensor. Soil-dwelling Streptomyces species rely on response regulators lacking conserved residues to govern expression of antibiotic biosynthetic enzymes in a phosphorylation-independent manner.
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Affiliation(s)
- Varsha Raghavan
- Department of Molecular Microbiology, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO 63110, USA
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3
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Castillo AR, Arevalo SS, Woodruff AJ, Ottemann KM. Experimental analysis of Helicobacter pylori transcriptional terminators suggests this microbe uses both intrinsic and factor-dependent termination. Mol Microbiol 2008; 67:155-70. [PMID: 18078442 DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2958.2007.06033.x] [Citation(s) in RCA: 16] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 12/22/2022]
Abstract
In this study, we report experimental analysis of transcriptional terminators in the human pathogen Helicobacter pylori. Previous bioinformatics approaches came to differing conclusions regarding transcriptional termination in this bacterium. We used a reporter construct, the tnpR-encoded resolvase, to assess terminators. In our first experiments, we found that a subset of previously predicted intrinsic terminators for H. pylori are functional. In our second experiments, we used an unbiased screen to identify putative terminators and then characterized 18 of these. We found that these putative terminators overlap genomic regions that are either intergenic or intragenic. Using reverse transcription PCR, we showed that an intergenic terminator and an intragenic antisense terminator function at their endogenous loci. Additionally, we found that putative terminators contain features of both intrinsic and Rho-dependent termination, but that intrinsic terminators define the majority. We were unable to delete rho, however, in H. pylori, suggesting that it is essential and likely important. Finally, we carried out a mutational analysis of one of our randomly identified terminators that has both intrinsic and Rho-dependent features, and found that they are both functional. In conclusion, we found that H. pylori possesses numerous Rho-dependent and intrinsic terminators including some found in intragenic regions.
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Affiliation(s)
- Andrea R Castillo
- Department of Environmental Toxicology, University of California, Santa Cruz, CA, USA.
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Dailidiene D, Tan S, Ogura K, Zhang M, Lee AH, Severinov K, Berg DE. Urea sensitization caused by separation of Helicobacter pylori RNA polymerase beta and beta' subunits. Helicobacter 2007; 12:103-11. [PMID: 17309746 DOI: 10.1111/j.1523-5378.2007.00479.x] [Citation(s) in RCA: 7] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.4] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Submit a Manuscript] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 12/30/2022]
Abstract
BACKGROUND The beta and beta' subunits of RNA polymerase are fused in all Helicobacters, but separate in most other taxa. Prior studies had shown that this fusion is not essential for viability in culture or in vivo, but had not tested it for potentially important quantitative effects on phenotype. METHODS The effect of separating rpoB and rpoC sequences on Helicobacter pylori growth was tested in culture and during mouse infection. RESULTS Derivatives of strains X47 and SS1 carrying this "rpoBCsplit" allele colonized mice less vigorously than their wild-type parents in competition tests. With X47 rpoBCsplit, this reduced vigor was evident in wild-type mice, whereas with SS1 rpoBCsplit it was seen only in cytokine IL-10- and IL-12beta-deficient mice. In culture, the rpoBCsplit allele sensitized each of four strains tested (X47, SS1, 88-3887, and AM1) to urea, a metabolite that is secreted into the gastric mucosa; urea sensitization was more severe in X47 than in SS1 genetic backgrounds. The rpoBCsplit allele also caused poorer growth on Ham's F12 agar, a nutritionally limiting medium, but had little effect on sensitivity to mild acidity. CONCLUSIONS H. pylori's normal RNA polymerase beta-beta' subunit fusion contributes quantitatively to fitness. We propose that urea, although important to H. pylori in vivo, also be considered inhibitory; and that H. pylori's natural beta-beta' subunit fusion helps it cope with urea exposure.
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Affiliation(s)
- Daiva Dailidiene
- Department of Molecular Microbiology, Washington University Medical School, St. Louis, Missouri 63110, USA
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5
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Pasek S, Risler JL, Brézellec P. The role of domain redundancy in genetic robustness against null mutations. J Mol Biol 2006; 362:184-91. [PMID: 16914158 DOI: 10.1016/j.jmb.2006.07.033] [Citation(s) in RCA: 20] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.1] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 04/28/2006] [Revised: 07/11/2006] [Accepted: 07/18/2006] [Indexed: 11/19/2022]
Abstract
A key question in molecular genetics is why severe gene mutations often do not result in a detectable abnormal phenotype. Alternative networks are known to be a gene compensation mechanism. Gene redundancy, i.e. the presence of a duplicate gene (or paralog) elsewhere in the genome, also underpins many cases of gene dispensability. Here, we investigated the role of partial duplicate genes on dispensability, where a partial duplicate is defined as a gene that has no paralog but which codes for a protein made of domains, each of which belongs to at least another protein. The rationale behind this investigation is that, as a partial duplicate codes for a domain redundant protein, we hypothesised that its deletion might have a less severe phenotypic effect than the deletion of other genes. This prompted us to (re)address the topic of gene dispensability by focusing on domain redundancy rather than on gene redundancy. Using fitness data of single-gene deletion mutants of Saccharomyces cerevisiae, we will show that domain redundancy is a compensation mechanism, the strength of which is lower than that of gene redundancy. Finally, we shall discuss the molecular basis of this new compensation mechanism.
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Affiliation(s)
- Sophie Pasek
- Laboratoire Statistique et Génome, UMR CNRS 8071, 523 Place des Terrasses, 91034 Evry cedex, France.
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6
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Aspholm M, Kalia A, Ruhl S, Schedin S, Arnqvist A, Lindén S, Sjöström R, Gerhard M, Semino-Mora C, Dubois A, Unemo M, Danielsson D, Teneberg S, Lee WK, Berg DE, Borén T. Helicobacter pylori adhesion to carbohydrates. Methods Enzymol 2006; 417:293-339. [PMID: 17132512 PMCID: PMC2576508 DOI: 10.1016/s0076-6879(06)17020-2] [Citation(s) in RCA: 44] [Impact Index Per Article: 2.4] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 12/23/2022]
Abstract
Adherence of bacterial pathogens to host tissues contributes to colonization and virulence and typically involves specific interactions between bacterial proteins called adhesins and cognate oligosaccharide (glycan) or protein motifs in the host that are used as receptors. A given pathogen may have multiple adhesins, each specific for a different set of receptors and, potentially, with different roles in infection and disease. This chapter provides strategies for identifying and analyzing host glycan receptors and the bacterial adhesins that exploit them as receptors, with particular reference to adherence of the gastric pathogen Helicobacter pylori.
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Affiliation(s)
- Marina Aspholm
- Department of Molecular Biosciences, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway
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7
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Tan S, Fraley CD, Zhang M, Dailidiene D, Kornberg A, Berg DE. Diverse phenotypes resulting from polyphosphate kinase gene (ppk1) inactivation in different strains of Helicobacter pylori. J Bacteriol 2005; 187:7687-95. [PMID: 16267293 PMCID: PMC1280296 DOI: 10.1128/jb.187.22.7687-7695.2005] [Citation(s) in RCA: 33] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.7] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Received: 04/18/2005] [Accepted: 08/29/2005] [Indexed: 02/08/2023] Open
Abstract
Connections among biochemical pathways should help buffer organisms against environmental stress and affect the pace and trajectory of genome evolution. To explore these ideas, we studied consequences of inactivating the gene for polyphosphate kinase 1 (ppk1) in strains of Helicobacter pylori, a genetically diverse gastric pathogen. The PPK1 enzyme catalyzes synthesis of inorganic polyphosphate (poly P), a reservoir of high-energy phosphate bonds with multiple roles. Prior analyses in less-fastidious microbes had implicated poly P in stress resistance, motility, and virulence. In our studies, ppk1 inactivation caused the expected near-complete absence of poly P (>250-fold decrease) but had phenotypic effects that differed markedly among unrelated strains: (i) poor initial growth on standard brain heart infusion agar (five of six strains tested); (ii) weakened colonization of mice (4 of 5 strains); (iii) reduced growth on Ham's F-12 agar, a nutritionally limiting medium (8 of 11 strains); (iv) heightened susceptibility to metronidazole (6 of 17 strains); and (v) decreased motility in soft agar (1 of 13 strains). Complementation tests confirmed that the lack of growth of one Deltappk1 strain on F-12 agar and the inability to colonize mice of another were each due to ppk1 inactivation. Thus, the importance of ppk1 to H. pylori differed among strains and the phenotypes monitored. We suggest that quantitative interactions, as seen here, are common among genes that affect metabolic pathways and that H. pylori's high genetic diversity makes it well suited for studies of such interactions, their underlying mechanisms, and their evolutionary consequences.
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Affiliation(s)
- Shumin Tan
- Department of Molecular Microbiology, Washington University Medical School, St. Louis, MO 63110, USA
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Mukhopadhyay AK, Jeong JY, Dailidiene D, Hoffman PS, Berg DE. The fdxA ferredoxin gene can down-regulate frxA nitroreductase gene expression and is essential in many strains of Helicobacter pylori. J Bacteriol 2003; 185:2927-35. [PMID: 12700272 PMCID: PMC154416 DOI: 10.1128/jb.185.9.2927-2935.2003] [Citation(s) in RCA: 23] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.1] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 12/28/2022] Open
Abstract
Very few examples of metabolic regulation are known in the gastric pathogen Helicobacter pylori. An unanticipated case was suggested, however, upon finding two types of metronidazole (Mtz)-susceptible strains: type I, in which frxA (which encodes a nitroreductase that contributes to Mtz susceptibility) is quiescent, and type II, in which frxA is well expressed. Here we report that inactivation of the fdxA ferredoxin gene (hp277) in type I strains resulted in high-level frxA expression (in effect, making them type II). However, fdxA null derivatives were obtained from only 6 of 32 type I strains tested that were readily transformed with an frxA::aphA marker. This suggested that fdxA is often essential. This essentiality was overcome in 4 of 20 strains by inactivating frxA, which suggested both that frxA overexpression is potentially deleterious and also that fdxA has additional, often vital roles. With type II strains, in contrast, fdxA null derivatives were obtained in 20 of 23 cases tested. Thus, fdxA is dispensable in most strains that normally exhibit (and tolerate) strong frxA expression. We propose that restraint of frxA expression helps maintain balanced metabolic networks in most type I strains, that other homeostatic mechanisms predominate in type II strains, and that these complex results constitute a phenotypic manifestation of H. pylori's great genetic diversity.
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Affiliation(s)
- Asish K Mukhopadhyay
- Department of Molecular Microbiology, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri 63110, USA
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Willis SH, Kazmierczak KM, Carter RH, Rothman-Denes LB. N4 RNA polymerase II, a heterodimeric RNA polymerase with homology to the single-subunit family of RNA polymerases. J Bacteriol 2002; 184:4952-61. [PMID: 12193610 PMCID: PMC135322 DOI: 10.1128/jb.184.18.4952-4961.2002] [Citation(s) in RCA: 28] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.3] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/20/2022] Open
Abstract
Bacteriophage N4 middle genes are transcribed by a phage-coded, heterodimeric, rifampin-resistant RNA polymerase, N4 RNA polymerase II (N4 RNAPII). Sequencing and transcriptional analysis revealed that the genes encoding the two subunits comprising N4 RNAPII are translated from a common transcript initiating at the N4 early promoter Pe3. These genes code for proteins of 269 and 404 amino acid residues with sequence similarity to the single-subunit, phage-like RNA polymerases. The genes encoding the N4 RNAPII subunits, as well as a synthetic construct encoding a fusion polypeptide, have been cloned and expressed. Both the individually expressed subunits and the fusion polypeptide reconstitute functional enzymes in vivo and in vitro.
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Affiliation(s)
- S H Willis
- Department of Molecular Genetics, The University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois 60637, USA
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10
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Eaton KA, Gilbert JV, Joyce EA, Wanken AE, Thevenot T, Baker P, Plaut A, Wright A. In vivo complementation of ureB restores the ability of Helicobacter pylori to colonize. Infect Immun 2002; 70:771-8. [PMID: 11796610 PMCID: PMC127652 DOI: 10.1128/iai.70.2.771-778.2002] [Citation(s) in RCA: 49] [Impact Index Per Article: 2.2] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/04/2023] Open
Abstract
The objective of this study was to determine (i) if complementation of ureB-negative Helicobacter pylori restores colonization and (ii) if urease is a useful reporter for promoter activity in vivo. Strains used were M6, M6DeltaureB, and 10 recombinant derivatives of M6 or M6DeltaureB in which urease expression was under the control of different H. pylori promoters. Mice were orally inoculated with either the wild type or one of the mutant strains, and colonization, in vivo urease activity, and extent of gastritis were determined. Of eight M6DeltaureB recombinants tested, four colonized mice. Of those, three had the highest in vitro urease activity of any of the recombinants, significantly different from that of the noncolonizing mutants. The fourth colonizing recombinant, with ureB under control of the cag-15 promoter, had in vitro urease activity which did not differ significantly from the noncolonizing strains. In vivo, urease activities of the four colonizing transformants and the wild-type control were indistinguishable. There were no differences in gastritis or epithelial lesions between mice infected with M6 and those infected with the transformants. These results demonstrate that recovery of urease activity can restore colonizing ability to urease-negative H. pylori. They also suggest that cag-15 is upregulated in vivo, as was previously suggested by demonstrating that it is upregulated upon contact with epithelial cells. Finally, our results suggest that total urease activity and colonization density do not contribute to gastritis due to H. pylori.
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Affiliation(s)
- Kathryn A Eaton
- Department of Veterinary Biosciences, Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio 43210, USA.
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11
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Baker LM, Raudonikiene A, Hoffman PS, Poole LB. Essential thioredoxin-dependent peroxiredoxin system from Helicobacter pylori: genetic and kinetic characterization. J Bacteriol 2001; 183:1961-73. [PMID: 11222594 PMCID: PMC95091 DOI: 10.1128/jb.183.6.1961-1973.2001] [Citation(s) in RCA: 151] [Impact Index Per Article: 6.6] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 12/15/2022] Open
Abstract
Helicobacter pylori, an oxygen-sensitive microaerophile, contains an alkyl hydroperoxide reductase homologue (AhpC, HP1563) that is more closely related to 2-Cys peroxiredoxins of higher organisms than to most other eubacterial AhpC proteins. Allelic replacement mutagenesis revealed ahpC to be essential, suggesting a critical role for AhpC in defending H. pylori against oxygen toxicity. Characterization of the ahpC promoter region divulged two putative regulatory elements and identified the transcription initiation site, which was mapped to 96 and 94 bp upstream of the initiation codon. No homologue of ahpF, which encodes the dedicated AhpC reductase in most eubacteria, was found in the H. pylori genome. Instead, homologues of Escherichia coli thioredoxin (Trx) reductase (TrxR, HP0825) and Trx (Trx1, HP0824) formed a reductase system for H. pylori AhpC. A second Trx homologue (Trx2, HP1458) was identified but was incapable of AhpC reduction, although Trx2 exhibited disulfide reductase activity with other substrates [insulin and 5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoic acid)]. AhpC interactions with each substrate, Trx1 and hydroperoxide, were bimolecular and nonsaturable (infinite V(max) and K(m) values) but rapid enough (at 1 x 10(5) to 2 x 10(5) M(-1) s(-1)) to suggest an important role for AhpC in cellular peroxide metabolism. AhpC also exhibited a wide specificity for hydroperoxide substrates, which, taken together with the above results, suggests a minimal binding site for hydroperoxides composed of little more than the cysteinyl (Cys49) active site. H. pylori AhpC was not reduced by Salmonella typhimurium AhpF and was slightly more active with E. coli TrxR and Trx1 than was S. typhimurium AhpC, demonstrating the specialized catalytic properties of this peroxiredoxin.
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Affiliation(s)
- L M Baker
- Department of Biochemistry, Wake Forest University School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, North Carolina 27157, USA
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12
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Jeong JY, Berg DE. Mouse-colonizing Helicobacter pylori SS1 is unusually susceptible to metronidazole due to two complementary reductase activities. Antimicrob Agents Chemother 2000; 44:3127-32. [PMID: 11036035 PMCID: PMC101615 DOI: 10.1128/aac.44.11.3127-3132.2000] [Citation(s) in RCA: 21] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.9] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/20/2022] Open
Abstract
In most strains of Helicobacter pylori, mutational inactivation of the rdxA (HP0954) gene, which encodes a nitroreductase that converts metronidazole (MTZ) from a harmless prodrug to a mutagenic and bacteriocidal product, is sufficient to make this pathogen resistant to clinically significant levels of MTZ. Here we report that SS1, a strain with the special ability to colonize mice, is unusual in being susceptible to very low concentrations of MTZ (0.5 microgram/ml) and in being especially difficult to mutate to MTZ resistance (Mtz(r)). These phenotypic traits were traced to expression in this strain of the normally quiescent H. pylori frxA gene (HP0642, an rdxA paralog) along with rdxA. Transformation tests using rdxA::cam and frxA::kan insertion mutant DNAs, with selection solely for the chloramphenicol and kanamycin resistance markers, and sequence analyses of frxA in spontaneous Mtz(r) derivatives of rdxA null mutant strains each showed that the development of Mtz(r) in SS1 required inactivation of both rdxA and frxA. Inactivation of either gene alone left SS1 susceptible to MTZ, although it was readily mutable from an MTZ-susceptible to an Mtz(r) phenotype. Reverse transcriptase PCR tests showed that frxA mRNA was at least 10-fold more abundant in SS1 than in reference strain 26695. It is proposed that these reductases play primarily nutritional roles during bacterial growth.
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Affiliation(s)
- J Y Jeong
- Departments of Molecular Microbiology and Genetics, Washington University Medical School, St. Louis, Missouri 63110, USA
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13
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Jeong JY, Mukhopadhyay AK, Dailidiene D, Wang Y, Velapatiño B, Gilman RH, Parkinson AJ, Nair GB, Wong BC, Lam SK, Mistry R, Segal I, Yuan Y, Gao H, Alarcon T, Brea ML, Ito Y, Kersulyte D, Lee HK, Gong Y, Goodwin A, Hoffman PS, Berg DE. Sequential inactivation of rdxA (HP0954) and frxA (HP0642) nitroreductase genes causes moderate and high-level metronidazole resistance in Helicobacter pylori. J Bacteriol 2000; 182:5082-90. [PMID: 10960091 PMCID: PMC94655 DOI: 10.1128/jb.182.18.5082-5090.2000] [Citation(s) in RCA: 97] [Impact Index Per Article: 4.0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 01/28/2023] Open
Abstract
Helicobacter pylori is a human-pathogenic bacterial species that is subdivided geographically, with different genotypes predominating in different parts of the world. Here we test and extend an earlier conclusion that metronidazole (Mtz) resistance is due to mutation in rdxA (HP0954), which encodes a nitroreductase that converts Mtz from prodrug to bactericidal agent. We found that (i) rdxA genes PCR amplified from 50 representative Mtz(r) strains from previously unstudied populations in Asia, South Africa, Europe, and the Americas could, in each case, transform Mtz(s) H. pylori to Mtz(r); (ii) Mtz(r) mutant derivatives of a cultured Mtz(s) strain resulted from mutation in rdxA; and (iii) transformation of Mtz(s) strains with rdxA-null alleles usually resulted in moderate level Mtz resistance (16 microg/ml). However, resistance to higher Mtz levels was common among clinical isolates, a result that implicates at least one additional gene. Expression in Escherichia coli of frxA (HP0642; flavin oxidoreductase), an rdxA paralog, made this normally resistant species Mtz(s), and frxA inactivation enhanced Mtz resistance in rdxA-deficient cells but had little effect on the Mtz susceptibility of rdxA(+) cells. Strains carrying frxA-null and rdxA-null alleles could mutate to even higher resistance, a result implicating one or more additional genes in residual Mtz susceptibility and hyperresistance. We conclude that most Mtz resistance in H. pylori depends on rdxA inactivation, that mutations in frxA can enhance resistance, and that genes that confer Mtz resistance without rdxA inactivation are rare or nonexistent in H. pylori populations.
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Affiliation(s)
- J Y Jeong
- Department of Molecular Microbiology and Department of Genetics, Washington University Medical School, St. Louis, Missouri 63110, USA
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Zakharova N, Paster BJ, Wesley I, Dewhirst FE, Berg DE, Severinov KV. Fused and overlapping rpoB and rpoC genes in Helicobacters, Campylobacters, and related bacteria. J Bacteriol 1999; 181:3857-9. [PMID: 10368167 PMCID: PMC93870 DOI: 10.1128/jb.181.12.3857-3859.1999] [Citation(s) in RCA: 24] [Impact Index Per Article: 1.0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Grants] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/20/2022] Open
Abstract
The genes coding for the beta (rpoB) and beta' (rpoC) subunits of RNA polymerase are fused in the gastric pathogen Helicobacter pylori but separate in other taxonomic groups. To better understand how the unique fused structure evolved, we determined DNA sequences at and around the rpoB-rpoC junction in 10 gastric and nongastric species of Helicobacter and in members of the related genera Wolinella, Arcobacter, Sulfurospirillum, and Campylobacter. We found the fusion to be specific to Helicobacter and Wolinella genera; rpoB and rpoC overlap in the other genera. The fusion may have arisen by a frameshift mutation at the site of rpoB and rpoC overlap. Loss of good Shine-Dalgarno sequences might then have fixed the fusion in the Helicobacteraceae, even if fusion itself did not confer a selective advantage.
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Affiliation(s)
- N Zakharova
- Waksman Institute, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, Piscataway, New Jersey 08854, USA
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