Infection and Immunity, October 1998, p. 4957-4964, Vol. 66, No. 10
0019-9567/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Istituto di
Microbiologia,1
Dipartimento di Medicina
Sperimentale e Patologia,3 and
Dipartimento di Biologia Cellulare e dello
Sviluppo,
Received 11 May 1998/Returned for modification 26 June
1998/Accepted 21 July 1998
The transcription of the virulence plasmid (pINV)-carried invasion
genes of Shigella flexneri and enteroinvasive
Escherichia coli (EIEC) is induced at 37°C and repressed
at 30°C. In this work, we report that the O135: K
:H
EIEC
strain HN280 and S. flexneri SFZM53, M90T, and 454, of
serotypes 4, 5, and 2a, respectively, produce apyrase
(ATP-diphosphohydrolase), the product of the apy gene. In
addition, the S. flexneri strains, but not the EIEC strain, produce a nonspecific phosphatase encoded by the phoN-Sf
gene. Both apy and phoN-Sf are pINV-carried
loci whose contribution to the pathogenicity of enteroinvasive
microorganisms has been hypothesized but not yet established. We found
that, like that of virulence genes, the expression of both the
apy and the phoN-Sf genes was temperature
regulated. Strain HN280/32 (a pINV-integrated avirulent derivative of
HN280 which has a severe reduction of virB transcription)
expressed the apy gene in a temperature-regulated fashion
but to a much lower extent than wild-type HN280, while the introduction
of the
hns deletion in HN280 and in HN280/32 induced the
wild-type temperature-independent expression of apyrase. These results
indicated that a reduction of virB transcription, which is
known to occur in the pINV-integrated strain HN280/32, accounts for
reduced apyrase expression and that the histone-like protein H-NS is
involved in this regulatory network. Independent spontaneously
generated mutants of HN280 and of SFZM53 which had lost the capacity to
bind Congo red dye (Crb
) were isolated, and the molecular
alterations of pINV were evaluated by PCR analysis. Alterations of pINV
characterized by the absence of virF or virB
and by the presence of the intact apy locus or intact
apy and phoN-Sf loci were detected among
Crb
mutants of HN280 and SFZM53, respectively. While all
Crb
apy+ mutants of HN280 failed
to produce apyrase, Crb
apy+
phoN-Sf+ mutants of SFZM53 lacked apyrase activity
but produced a nonspecific phosphatase, like parental SFZM53. Moreover,
the introduction of recombinant plasmids carrying cloned
virF (pMYSH6504) or virB (pBN1) into
Crb
mutants of HN280 and SFZM53 lacking virF
or virB, respectively, fully restored temperature-dependent
apyrase expression to levels resembling those of the parental strains.
Taken together, our results demonstrate that, as has already been shown
for invasion genes, apy is another locus whose expression
is controlled by temperature, H-NS, and the VirF and VirB regulatory
cascade. In contrast, the temperature-regulated expression of
the nonspecific phosphatase does not appear to be under the
control of the same regulatory network. These findings led us to
speculate that apyrase may play a role in the pathogenicity of
enteroinvasive bacteria.
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Dipartimento di
Scienze Biomediche, Sezione di Microbiologia, Università G. D'Annunzio, Via dei Vestini, 31, 66100 Chieti, Italy. Phone:
39-871-3555279. Fax: 39-871-3555282. E-mail:
nicoletti{at}axrma.uniroma1.it.
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