Phenotypes controlled by the Brucella abortus two component system BvrR/BvrS are differentially impacted by BvrR phosphorylation
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Altamirano Silva, Pamela
Meza Torres, Jazmín Andrea
Zúñiga Pereira, Ana Mariel
Zamora Jaen, Sigrid
Pietrosemoli, Natalia
Cantos González, Gabriela
Peltier, Johann
Pizarro Cerdá, Javier
Moreno Robles, Edgardo
Chacón Díaz, Carlos
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Abstract
Brucella abortus is a zoonotic pathogen whose virulence depends on its ability
to survive intracellularly at the endoplasmic reticulum derived compartment.
The two-component system BvrR/BvrS (BvrRS) is essential for intracellular
survival due to the transcriptional control of the type IV secretion system VirB
and its transcriptional regulator VjbR. It is a master regulator of several traits
including membrane homeostasis by controlling gene expression of membrane
components, such as Omp25. BvrR phosphorylation is related to DNA binding at
target regions, thereby repressing or activating gene transcription. To understand
the role of BvrR phosphorylation we generated dominant positive and negative
versions of this response regulator, mimicking phosphorylated and nonphosphorylated BvrR states and, in addition to the wild-type version, these variants
were introduced in a BvrR negative background. We then characterized BvrRScontrolled phenotypes and assessed the expression of proteins regulated by the
system. We found two regulatory patterns exerted by BvrR. The first pattern was
represented by resistance to polymyxin and expression of Omp25 (membrane
conformation) which were restored to normal levels by the dominant positive and
the wild-type version, but not the dominant negative BvrR. The second pattern was
represented by intracellular survival and expression of VjbR and VirB (virulence)
which were, again, complemented by the wild-type and the dominant positive
variants of BvrR but were also significantly restored by complementation with
the dominant negative BvrR. These results indicate a differential transcriptional
response of the genes controlled to the phosphorylation status of BvrR and
suggest that unphosphorylated BvrR binds and impacts the expression of a subset
of genes. We confirmed this hypothesis by showing that the dominant negative
BvrR did not interact with the omp25 promoter whereas it could interact with
vjbR promoter. Furthermore, a global transcriptional analysis revealed that a
subset of genes responds to the presence of the dominant negative BvrR. Thus,
BvrR possesses diverse strategies to exert transcriptional control on the genes
it regulates and, consequently, impacting on the phenotypes controlled by this
response regulator
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Keywords
Regulatory, Two-component system, Phosphorylation, Response regulator, Virulences, Pattern, Brucella, Intracellular survival
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https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/microbiology
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