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Infection and Immunity, April 2007, p. 1946-1953, Vol. 75, No. 4
0019-9567/07/$08.00+0     doi:10.1128/IAI.01435-06
Copyright © 2007, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.

Effect of Fatty Acids and Cholesterol Present in Bile on Expression of Virulence Factors and Motility of Vibrio cholerae{triangledown}

Arpita Chatterjee,1 Pradeep K. Dutta,2 and Rukhsana Chowdhury1*

Biophysics Division,1 Medicinal Chemistry Division, Indian Institute of Chemical Biology, Calcutta 700 032, India2

Received 7 September 2006/ Returned for modification 9 November 2006/ Accepted 16 January 2007

Bile induces pleiotropic responses that affect production of virulence factors, motility, and other phenotypes in the enteric pathogen Vibrio cholerae. Since bile is a heterogeneous mixture, crude bile was fractionated, and the components that mediate virulence gene repression and enhancement of motility were identified by nuclear magnetic resonance, gas chromatography (GC), and GC-mass spectrometry analyses. The unsaturated fatty acids detected in bile, arachidonic, linoleic, and oleic acids, drastically repressed expression of the ctxAB and tcpA genes, which encode cholera toxin and the major subunit of the toxin-coregulated pilus, respectively. The unsaturated fatty acid-dependent repression was due to silencing of ctxAB and tcpA expression by the histone-like nucleoid-structuring protein H-NS, even in the presence of the transcriptional activator ToxT. Unsaturated fatty acids also enhanced motility of V. cholerae due to increased expression of flrA, the first gene of a regulatory cascade that controls motility. H-NS had no role in the fatty acid-mediated enhancement of motility. It is likely that the ToxR/ToxT system that negatively regulates motility is rendered nonfunctional in the presence of unsaturated fatty acids, leading to an increase in motility. Motility and flrA expression were also increased in the presence of cholesterol, another component of bile, in an H-NS- and ToxR/ToxT-independent manner.


* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Biophysics Division, Indian Institute of Chemical Biology, 4 Raja S. C. Mullick Road, Calcutta 700 032, India. Phone: 91 33 473 0350. Fax: 91 33 473 5197. E-mail: rukhsana{at}iicb.res.in.

{triangledown} Published ahead of print on 29 January 2007.

Editor: V. J. DiRita


Infection and Immunity, April 2007, p. 1946-1953, Vol. 75, No. 4
0019-9567/07/$08.00+0     doi:10.1128/IAI.01435-06
Copyright © 2007, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.




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