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Infection and Immunity, April 2006, p. 2304-2316, Vol. 74, No. 4
0019-9567/06/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/IAI.74.4.2304-2316.2006
Copyright © 2006, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
C. Jeffrey Smith,
Andrea M. Gough, and
Edson R. Rocha*
Department of Microbiology and Immunology, East Carolina University Brody School of Medicine, Greenville, North Carolina
Received 3 November 2005/ Returned for modification 9 January 2006/ Accepted 27 January 2006
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Although the whole arsenal of B. fragilis virulence determinants is unclear, certain factors, such as capsular polysaccharides, microbial adherence, production of proteases and neuraminidase, and inhibition of phagocytosis, are considered important (43). The most studied B. fragilis virulence factor associated with pathogenicity is the production of eight distinct capsular polysaccharide complexes and their relation to abscess formation (14, 15, 21). Though adherence, lipopolysaccharide, and the production of neuraminidase, enterotoxin, and proteolytic enzymes might play a role in B. fragilis pathogenicity, they are not currently recognized to be strong determinants of virulence (43).
There are other factors that are considered important in infections by aerobes and facultative bacteria, but they have been given little attention as far as their role in the pathogenesis of Bacteroides spp. is concerned. One such factor is the ability of B. fragilis to produce hemolysins or cytolysins. Hemolysins have been reported to be powerful virulence determinants in both gram-positive and gram-negative bacteria (24, 38, 51). Hemolysins are cytotoxic proteins that target cell membranes, and their mechanisms of damaging membrane integrity can be classified into three major groups: enzymatic activity, pore-forming cytolysin, or surfactant (51). Many microbial hemolysins offer an advantage to the bacteria by lysing and killing incoming leukocytes, thus promoting survival of the microbe by not only weakening the immune system but also by gaining access to nutrients (24). Moreover, bacterial cytolysins/hemolysins play an important role in the equilibrium control of the microbial ecosystem population associated with eukaryotic hosts (9).
To date, no hemolysin has been characterized in B. fragilis despite the fact that rare strains have a hemolytic phenotype (18, 19). Nevertheless, a search of the B. fragilis genome sequence available at http://www.sanger.ac.uk/Projects/B_fragilis/revealed the presence of 10 genes with homology to other bacterial hemolysins (K. P. Robertson, C. J. Smith, and E. R. Rocha, Abstr. 104th ASM Gen. Meet. Am. Soc. Microbiol. 2004, abstr. B-042, 2004). These findings were intriguing because this anaerobic pathogen is classified as a nonhemolytic bacterium (18, 19, 53). To clarify this apparent contradiction, putative hemolysin genes found in the B. fragilis genome were cloned and found to confer a hemolytic phenotype in a nonhemolytic Escherichia coli strain (K. P. Robertson, C. J. Smith, and E. R. Rocha, Abstr. Anaerobe 7th Biennial Cong. Anaer. Soc. Am., abstr. II-O2, 2004). More recently, independent studies have confirmed our observation that there is an extensive number of putative hemolysin homologues in the annotated genome sequences of B. fragilis NCTC9343 and YCH46 (7, 22). Interestingly, this extensive number of putative hemolysin genes does not correlate with the "nonhemolytic" characteristic phenotype of most clinical and laboratory strains of B. fragilis (18, 19, 53). Therefore, these findings prompted us to characterize these putative hemolysin genes in order to confirm their hemolytic/cytolytic properties and role in B. fragilis pathophysiology. It is important to mention that the only other cytotoxin that has been studied in B. fragilis, fragilysin, is a Zn-metalloprotease enterotoxin that is cytotoxic only to the human intestinal carcinoma cell line HT29/C1. It specifically cleaves E-cadherin of the zone adherens (40). Moreover, fragilysin is not membranolytic to eukaryotic cells (50), nor does it seem to be a virulence factor for extraintestinal infections (12). These properties are much different than the characteristics of hemolysins mentioned above.
In this study we report the characterization of B. fragilis hemolysins HlyA, HlyB, and HlyIII. We also show that HlyA and HlyB are two-component cytolysins that act together to enhance their respective singular hemolytic activities against erythrocytes. The hlyB and hlyA genes are organized in an operon whose expression is differentially regulated by oxygen and iron availability. In addition, we show that a hlyBA mutant has a diminished hemolytic activity, altered colony morphology, and a growth defect in vitro.
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TABLE 1. Strains and plasmids used in this study
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Measurement of hemolytic activity. Bacteria were harvested by centrifugation at 10,000 x g for 10 min. The cell pellet was washed with phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) (50 mM phosphate buffer, pH 7.4, 150 mM NaCl) and resuspended in 5 ml PBS. Cell lysates were obtained by using a French press. Whole cells and cell debris were separated at 10,000 x g for 30 min. Lysates were maintained at 4°C or stored at 70°C until needed. For liquid hemolytic assays, a protocol modified from the methods of Bernheimer (1) and Rowe and Welch (38) was used. Briefly, sheep red blood cells (RBCs) were washed with PBS and centrifuged at 400 x g for 5 min. Washes were repeated until the supernatant was visibly clear of hemoglobin. Erythrocyte suspensions were adjusted to 1% with PBS supplemented with 0.1% bovine serum albumin. Crude extracts were adjusted to approximately 2 mg/ml of protein. Then, 0.5 ml of this solution was incubated with 0.5 ml of the 1% erythrocyte suspension at 37°C. Samples were centrifuged at 120 x g for 7 min to remove undamaged RBCs. The concentration of released hemoglobin is estimated by reading absorbance at 545 nm in a spectrophotometer against a control background lysis solution (0.5 ml erythrocyte suspension with 0.5 ml PBS). A 100% hemolysis standard was obtained by mixing 1 volume of distilled water containing 0.04% saponin and 1 volume of 1% RBC suspension.
Construction of hlyBA and hlyIII deletion mutants.
A 1.43-kb chromosomal DNA fragment upstream from hlyB, including the first 57 nt within the N-terminal region, was amplified by PCR and cloned into the unique BamHI site of the E. coli-Bacteroides shuttle suicide vector pFD516 (42). Subsequently, a 1.68-kb DNA fragment downstream from hlyA, containing the last 155 nt of the hlyA C-terminal region, was amplified by PCR and cloned into the unique EcoRI site of the new construct pER-61. A 2.4-kb SstI fragment containing the tetracycline resistance gene tetQ was cloned into the unique SstI site of pER-61 to replace the internal 1.65-kb DNA fragment deleted from the hlyBA. The new plasmid pER-62, containing the
hlyBA::tetQ construct, was mobilized from E. coli DH10B into B. fragilis 638R by triparental filter mating protocols (41). Transconjugants were selected on BHIS agar containing 20 µg of rifamycin per ml, 100 µg of gentamicin per ml, and 5 µg of tetracycline per ml. Determination of sensitivity to either tetracycline or erythromycin was carried out to identify recombinants that were tetracycline resistant and erythromycin sensitive. Southern blot analysis was used to confirm the double-crossover genetic allele exchange of pER-62 into the B. fragilis chromosome. A transconjugant, BER-41, containing the
hlyBA::tetQ construct inserted into the B. fragilis 638R chromosome was selected for further studies.
To construct the hlyIII deletion mutant, a 520-bp internal DNA fragment from hlyIII was deleted and replaced by a 2.1-kb cefoxitin resistance gene, cfxA. Briefly, a 2.1-kb BamHI/EcoRI cfxA DNA fragment was cloned into the unique BamHI and EcoRI sites of the suicide vector pFD516. Then, a 1.52-kb DNA fragment upstream and a 1.60-kb DNA fragment downstream of the hlyIII gene were cloned, respectively, into the unique SphI/BamHI and EcoRI restriction sites of the pFD516/cfxA construct. The new plasmid, pER-64, carrying the
hlyIII::cfxA construct was mobilized into B. fragilis as described above. Transconjugants were selected on BHIS agar containing 20 µg of rifamycin per ml, 100 µg of gentamicin per ml, and 25 µg of cefoxitin per ml. Sensitivity to either cefoxitin or erythromycin was carried out to identify recombinants that were cefoxitin resistant and erythromycin sensitive as described above. A B. fragilis transconjugant, BER-45, containing the
hlyIII::cfxA construct inserted into the chromosome by double-crossover allelic recombination was selected for further analysis. The hlyBA::tetQ hlyIII::cfxA double mutant strain, BER-46, was obtained by mobilizing pER45 into strain BER-41 as described above.
Construction of a furA null mutant.
Briefly, a 275-bp EcoRV/NruI DNA fragment containing the first 25 N-terminal codons and 200 bp upstream of the furA promoter region was ligated in frame to a 1.7-kb NruI/SstI DNA fragment containing the last 17 furA codons and downstream region into pGEM-T (Promega, Madison, WI). The null mutation construct contained an in-frame deletion of 363 nt from the furA gene. Next, a 2.1-kb BamHI/blunted EcoRI cfxA gene was cloned into the BamHI/EcoRV sites of the new construct. Then, a 1.5-kb BamHI/BglII DNA fragment upstream of the furA promoter region was cloned into the BamHI site of the new construct pER-9. A 5.5-kb BamHI/SstI DNA fragment from pER-9 was cloned into the unique BamHI/SstI sites of the suicide vector pFD516. The new plasmid, pER10, was mobilized into B. fragilis 638R as described above. The mutant strain BER-2 containing the
furA construct inserted into the chromosome by double-crossover allelic recombination was grown under iron-replete and iron-limiting conditions. Total RNA was extracted as described below. Real-time reverse transcription-PCR of feoAB transcripts and feoAB::xylB transcriptional fusion analysis were carried out to determine whether strain BER-2 lost the normal iron regulation uptake mechanism controlled by the ferric uptake regulator FurA in other bacteria (23). Both methods showed that feoAB mRNA expression was no longer repressed under high-iron conditions compared to the parent strain, confirming the mutation and loss of normal iron-responsive FurA regulation (data not shown).
Bacterial two-hybrid system assay.
hlyB was cloned into the "bait" vector pBT (BacterioMatch II; Stratagene, La Jolla, CA) in frame with
cI. hlyA was cloned into the "prey" vector pTRG in frame with the
-subunit of RNA polymerase according to the manufacturer's instructions. The new constructs were cotransformed into the E. coli two-hybrid system reporter strain derived from XL1-Blue MRF' kan [
(mcrA)183
(mcrCB-hsdSMR-mrr)173 endA1 supE44 thi-1 recA1 gyrA96 relA1 lac [F' proAB lacIqZ
M15 Tn5 (Kanr)] containing the HIS3-aadA reporter cassette (Stratagene) and plated on selective screening medium. The selective screening plate is histidine-dropout M9 agar supplemented with 0.5 mM IPTG, 10 µg/ml tetracycline, 25 µg/ml chloramphenicol, and 5 mM 3-amino-1,2,4-triazole. Culture media were prepared according to the manufacturer's instructions. Transformants from selective medium were grown on dual-selective medium to confirm the interaction of the loaded "prey" and loaded "bait" constructs by the activation of the dual reporter system assay. Dual-selective screening plates are the same as selective medium but 12.5 µg/ml streptomycin is added. Self-activation controls are the E. coli two-hybrid system reporter strain carrying the following constructs: control 1, empty "bait" (pBT alone) cotransformed with loaded "prey" (pTRG/HlyA); control 2, loaded "bait" (pBT/HlyB) cotransformed with empty "prey" (pTRG alone).
RNA extraction and Northern blot hybridization. Bacteria were grown in semidefined medium (SDM) as previously described (33). Hemin was replaced by 5 µg/ml protoporphyrin IX when required. Addition of 50 µM 2,2'-bipyridyl and 100 µM desferrioxamine was used to restrict iron availability in SDM. Ferrous sulfate at 100 µM was added as indicated in the text. For oxidative stress experiments, cultures were grown to an A550 of 0.3 and treated with 50 µM H2O2 for 5 min prior to total RNA extraction. To induce oxygen stress, cultures were split in half, one half was kept anaerobically and the other half was shaken aerobically at 250 rpm at a volume/flask ratio of 1/5 as previously described. Total RNA extraction and Northern blot analysis of mRNA were carried out as previously described (32), and internal fragments of hlyA and hlyB were used as specific probes. Densitometry analysis of the autoradiograph was normalized to the relative intensity of total 23S and 16S rRNA detected on the ethidium bromide-stained agarose gel to correct for any loading differences.
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FIG. 1. Circular map showing the chromosomal locations of putative hemolysins within B. fragilis and B. thetaiotaomicron strains. The peptide sequence for each hemolysin from strain 638R was used to identify the homologous peptide and respective locus tag number in B. fragilis NCTC9343 and YCH46 and B. thetaiotaomicron VPI-5482. The locus tags for strain 638R are not shown, because the genome annotation has not yet been released to public domain databases though the complete genome sequence is available at http://www.sanger.ac.uk/Projects/B_fragilis/. The locus tag locations shown in parentheses were retrieved from references 7, 22, and 55 and from websites and an FTP site (http://www.sanger.ac.uk/Projects/B_fragilis/, ftp://ftp.sanger.ac.uk/pub/pathogens/bf/, and http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/viewer.fcgi?db=nucleotide&val=60491031). The percentage of amino acid identity of each gene product compared to that in strain 638R is shown in brackets. The genome length (in nucleotides) is depicted in each panel below the respective strain name.
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Hemolytic activity on BAP. When strains ATCC 25285, 638R, ATCC 23745, and VPI 2393 were grown on DM-BAP, they produced beta-hemolysis after 3 to 5 days, but much weaker activity was observed on BHIS-BAP during the same period of incubation (Fig. 2). The early appearance of beta-hemolytic zones on DM-BAP compared to BHI-BAP was an indication that the production of hemolysin(s) might be under the control of a nutritional/starvation mechanism. These results suggest that the apparent lack of the hemolytic phenotype in clinical isolates of B. fragilis may be the consequence of a short period of incubation typically used in clinical laboratory diagnosis procedures. Strains ATCC 25285, 638R, and VPI 2393, were hemolytic for sheep, human, and horse red blood cells on DM-BAP. In contrast, strain ATCC 23745 showed strong hemolytic activity to horse RBCs but not to sheep and human RBCs (Fig. 2). Interestingly, no apparent hemolytic activity was detected on DM-BAP containing rabbit RBCs, although strains ATCC 27285 and VPI 2393 produced dark brown pigmentation. Furthermore, strains ATCC 23745 and VPI 2393 showed strong hemolytic activity against horse and rabbit RBCs on BHI-BAP. These findings suggest that the hemolytic activity produced by B. fragilis might be influenced by differences in strain background, the origin of the RBCs, and growth conditions.
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FIG. 2. Hemolytic activity of B. fragilis strains grown on defined medium (DM) and BHIS agar supplemented with 5% defibrinated blood. Plates were incubated anaerobically at 37°C for 5 days. Strain designations and animal blood source are shown in each panel.
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FIG. 3. Hemolytic activity of E. coli DH10B transformed with pUC19 carrying B. fragilis hemolysin genes. Bacteria were grown aerobically on L-agar medium supplemented with 5% defibrinated blood (BAP) and 0.5 mM IPTG. For anaerobic growth, media were supplemented with 0.2% glucose. E. coli carrying pUC19 alone was used as a control vector. All genes were amplified from B. fragilis 638R except for hlyH which was amplified from ATCC 25285 strain. Hemolytic activity was determined by the appearance of a clear zone around the growth (beta-hemolysis) or the appearance of a greenish hemolytic zone around the colonies (alpha-hemolysis).
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FIG. 4. Hemolytic activity of E. coli YMZ19 (clyA::kan) expressing B. fragilis hemolysins HlyB, HlyA, and HlyBA and the vector pUC19 alone. Cultures were inoculated on L-agar plates containing 5% defibrinated human blood plus 0.5 mM IPTG, 100 µg/ml ampicillin, and 50 µg/ml kanamycin. (A) Bacteria inoculated on top of the agar. (B) Bacteria were stabbed through the blood agar.
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FIG. 5. Liquid hemolytic assay. Crude extracts of E. coli carrying HlyIII, HlyBA, and HlyB were used to determine hemolytic activity. E. coli carrying vector pUC19 alone was used as a control. Sheep erythrocytes were used in the liquid hemolytic assay as target cells. The release of hemoglobin was measured in the supernatant at A540. Symbols: , HlyIII; , HlyBA; , HlyA; , HlyB; , HlyA plus HlyB; , pUC19. A lysis assay was carried out by mixing 0.5 ml of crude extract, normalized to 2 mg/ml of protein, with 0.5 ml of the erythrocytes suspension (see Materials and Methods for details). Data are the averages for three experiments. All the standard errors were less than 5% and were therefore not included on the graph for clarity.
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FIG. 6. Diagram showing the genetic organization of B. fragilis (Bf) hemolysin genes hlyB and hlyA with other bacterial hemolysin orthologs. Pg-hypot., Porphyromonas gingivalis W83 conserved hypothetical protein (GenBank accession no. AAQ66862); Pg-hly, P. gingivalis W83 hemolysin A (AAQ66861); Pm-phyA, Prevotella melaninogenica hemolysin PhyA (AAB88217); Ws-hly, Wolinella succinogenes DSM 1740 hemolysin (NP_908080); Va-VAH5, Vibrio anguillarum hemolysin VAH5 (AB189398). The gray arrows indicate the open reading frames and their respective direction of transcription. The thin arrows depict mRNA transcript length. The bent arrow depicts the putative promoter region derived from Fig. 9. The conserved motif domains pfam01553 (acyltransferase) and COG3176 (hemolysin) present in respective gene products are depicted as boxes underneath the panel and were obtained from a search in the collection of multiple-sequence alignments at http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/.
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FIG. 7. E. coli two-hybrid system assay showing protein-protein interaction between HlyB and HlyA. E. coli reporter strain (Stratagene, La Jolla, CA) cotransformed with pBT-HlyB (bait) and pTRG-HlyA (prey) constructs were grown on (A) nonselective plate and (B) dual-selective plate. Self-activation controls are E. coli two-hybrid system reporter strain carrying the following constructs: control 1, empty "bait" (pBT alone) cotransformed with loaded "prey" (pTRG/HlyA); control 2, loaded "bait" (pBT/HlyB) cotransformed with empty "prey" (pTRG alone). See Materials and Methods for details on the bacterial two-hybrid system assay.
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FIG. 8. Characterization of hlyBA and hlyIII mutants. A) Hemolytic activity produced by B. fragilis strains. Bacteria were grown on BHIS agar supplemented with 5% human defibrinated blood. Plates were incubated for 8 days anaerobically. Bacteria were removed from the agar surface with sterile cotton swab for clarity. B) Colony morphology of B. fragilis strains grown on agar. Each strain was inoculated on top of BHIS agar and grown under anaerobic conditions. Strain designations are depicted above the colonies in panels A and B (WT, wild-type 638R parent strain). C) Growth of B. fragilis strains on SDM. Bacteria were inoculated into fresh SDM from an overnight culture, and growth rate was measured at an optical density (O.D.) of 550 nm. Data presented are averages from two independent experiments. Symbols: , 638R parent strain; , hlyBA mutant strain; , hlyIII mutant strain; , hlyBA hlyIII double mutant strain.
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FIG. 9. Autoradiograph of Northern hybridization of total RNA. A and B) B. fragilis 638R and isogenic fur mutant were grown to mid-log phase in SDM containing 100 µM FeSO4 for iron-replete conditions (+Fe) and SDM containing 50 µM 2,2'-bipyridyl and 100 µM desferrioxamine to impose iron-limiting conditions (Fe). Protoporphyrin IX (PpIX) was added to the medium as a source of tetrapyrrole macrocycle. The probe was an internal fragment from hlyA (panel A) or hlyB (panel B). The positions of the hlyA and hlyB mRNA components are indicated. The asterisk depicts the 16S compression region on the filter membrane. (C) B. fragilis 638R was grown in SDM supplemented with 5 µg/ml hemin and exposed to different oxidative stress conditions. The probe was an internal fragment of hlyA.
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The findings presented in this study indicate that hemolysins HlyA and HlyB are a two-component cytolysin. This is based on results showing that when both components are expressed together, there is a synergistic effect on hemolytic activity, and there is a protein-protein interaction. However, it is not known whether HlyA and HlyB protein complex formation occurs at the cell membrane or occurs prior to attachment on the eukaryotic cell surface. Though two-component hemolysins are produced by several bacteria (9, 25, 50, 52), B. fragilis HlyBA does not share homology with the classical Serratia marcescens family of two-component hemolysins (17) or bacterial pore-forming toxins of the RTX (repeat-in-toxin) exoprotein family (46). The mechanism of hemolytic activity of HlyBA is not known, but because HlyB has a conserved phospholipid/glycerol acyltransferase superfamily motif, we think that it might possess functional features within this group of enzymes involved in phospholipid biosynthesis (28, 48). Interestingly, the HlyB and HlyA peptides are homologous, respectively, to the acyltransferase and the hemolytic domains of hemolysins found in microorganisms such as Vibrio anguillarum and W. succinogenes. It is possible that a genetic mutation might have occurred in Bacteroides and in the closely related anaerobe P. gingivalis where HlyA and HlyB resulted from a split of a single peptide unit into two distinct peptides. The reverse phenomenon cannot be ruled out either. The reason for this is not known, but we presume that the two separate peptides may have other additional physiological properties directly interfering with bacterial physiology. In support of this is the fact that the B. thetaiotaomicron hlyBA genes are arranged in a transcriptional fashion similar to that in B. fragilis and the levels of B. thetaiotaomicron hlyBA mRNA are more abundant in early growth phase than the levels in later growth phase in vitro (44; NCBI/Gene Expression Omnibus (GEO) database repository/GEO database entry accession no. GSE2231).
Expression of HlyB and HlyA was shown to be differentially and coordinately regulated by oxygen and iron availability. The former represses hlyBA mRNA upon exposure to aerobic conditions, and our hypothesis is that HlyBA may be a potential virulence factor used by B. fragilis to injure and lyse host tissue cells in order to obtain essential nutrients in an extraintestinal anaerobic environment, such as an abscess. This is consistent with the fact that B. fragilis is able to proliferate after the establishment of anaerobic conditions at the site of infection (35, 36, 37, 39). In general, anaerobic conditions in the infected tissues are formed by the consumption of oxygen by facultative bacteria often found associated with anaerobes in polymicrobial infections (35, 36, 37, 39). The effects of oxygen limitation on hemolysin production and other virulence factors have been demonstrated in several pathogenic bacteria (10, 27, 47). For example, E. faecalis cytolysin/hemolysin CylLL and CylLS are up-regulated (8.6-fold) at the transcriptional level under anaerobic conditions compared to the levels in the presence of oxygen (10). The implications of anaerobic regulation of HlyBA in the pathogenicity of B. fragilis correlate nicely with the fact that the establishment of anaerobic infections in extraintestinal tissues follows the depletion of oxygen at the site of infection. Therefore, it is likely that HlyBA may contribute to B. fragilis pathogenicity in a low-oxygen and low-iron environment as discussed below.
Several studies have shown that B. fragilis is unable to synthesize protoporphyrin macrocycle and has an essential requirement for heme and nonheme iron (31, 45). This nutritional requirement correlates with the expression and role HlyBA might play to make possible bacterial access to iron and heme under the low-iron conditions encountered in host tissues. The production of hemolysins/cytolysins has been associated with the ability of pathogenic bacteria to obtain heme as a source of iron from lysed erythrocytes and other host cells (13). In agreement, iron-limiting conditions regulate the synthesis of hemolysins in many pathogenic bacteria (2, 3, 6, 23, 29). Thus, the iron-dependent regulation of hlyBA mRNA may help B. fragilis to overcome the iron-limiting conditions imposed by a host's iron-withholding mechanisms.
In conclusion, we showed in this study that B. fragilis encodes several functional hemolysins not previously characterized in this organism. Our studies on the synthesis and regulation of hemolysins may help us to understand B. fragilis pathogenicity and why this organism has a much greater potential to cause infections than any other anaerobic species that colonizes the human intestinal tract. In support of the hypothesis that hemolysins are important for B. fragilis virulence is a recent comparative genome analysis suggesting that the presence of hemolysin-like proteins and capsular polysaccharides may explain the difference in pathogenic potentials between the two closely related species B. fragilis and B. thetaiotaomicron (22).
This work was supported in part from PHS grant AI40588 to C.J.S.
Present address: Department of Microbiology, School of Biological Sciences, University of Reading, Reading, United Kingdom. ![]()
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-haemolysin expression in Escherichia coli. Microb. Pathog. 16:249-259.[CrossRef][Medline]This article has been cited by other articles:
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