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1.
J Bacteriol ; 202(11)2020 05 11.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32205462

RESUMEN

While alternating between insects and mammals during its life cycle, Yersinia pestis, the flea-transmitted bacterium that causes plague, regulates its gene expression appropriately to adapt to these two physiologically disparate host environments. In fleas competent to transmit Y. pestis, low-GC-content genes y3555, y3551, and y3550 are highly transcribed, suggesting that these genes have a highly prioritized role in flea infection. Here, we demonstrate that y3555, y3551, and y3550 are transcribed as part of a single polycistronic mRNA comprising the y3555, y3554, y3553, y355x, y3551, and y3550 genes. Additionally, y355x-y3551-y3550 compose another operon, while y3550 can be also transcribed as a monocistronic mRNA. The expression of these genes is induced by hyperosmotic salinity stress, which serves as an explicit environmental stimulus that initiates transcriptional activity from the predicted y3550 promoter. Y3555 has homology to pyridoxal 5'-phosphate (PLP)-dependent aromatic aminotransferases, while Y3550 and Y3551 are homologous to the Rid protein superfamily (YjgF/YER057c/UK114) members that forestall damage caused by reactive intermediates formed during PLP-dependent enzymatic activity. We demonstrate that y3551 specifically encodes an archetypal RidA protein with 2-aminoacrylate deaminase activity but Y3550 lacks Rid deaminase function. Heterologous expression of y3555 generates a critical aspartate requirement in a Salmonella entericaaspC mutant, while its in vitro expression, and specifically its heterologous coexpression with y3550, enhances the growth rate of an Escherichia coli ΔaspC ΔtyrB mutant in a defined minimal amino acid-supplemented medium. Our data suggest that the y3555, y3551, and y3550 genes operate cooperatively to optimize aromatic amino acid metabolism and are induced under conditions of hyperosmotic salinity stress.IMPORTANCE Distinct gene repertoires are expressed during Y. pestis infection of its flea and mammalian hosts. The functions of many of these genes remain predicted or unknown, necessitating their characterization, as this may provide a better understanding of Y. pestis specialized biological adaptations to the discrete environments of its two hosts. This study provides functional context to adjacently clustered horizontally acquired genes predominantly expressed in the flea host by deciphering their fundamental processes with regard to (i) transcriptional organization, (ii) transcription activation signals, and (iii) biochemical function. Our data support a role for these genes in osmoadaptation and aromatic amino acid metabolism, highlighting these as preferential processes by which Y. pestis gene expression is modulated during flea infection.


Asunto(s)
Aminoácidos Aromáticos/metabolismo , Siphonaptera/microbiología , Yersinia pestis/metabolismo , Animales , Proteínas Bacterianas/genética , Proteínas Bacterianas/metabolismo , Transferencia de Gen Horizontal , Operón , Yersinia pestis/genética , Yersinia pestis/crecimiento & desarrollo
2.
Genetics ; 216(2): 263-268, 2020 10.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33023928

RESUMEN

The Elizabeth W. Jones Award for Excellence in Education recognizes an individual who has had a significant impact on genetics education at any education level. Seth R. Bordenstein, Ph.D., Centennial Professor of Biological Sciences at Vanderbilt University and Founding Director of the Vanderbilt Microbiome Initiative, is the 2020 recipient in recognition of his cofounding, developing, and expanding Discover the Microbes Within! The Wolbachia Project.


Asunto(s)
Ciencia Ciudadana/métodos , Genética/educación , Microbiota , Wolbachia/genética , Animales , Distinciones y Premios , Ciencia Ciudadana/organización & administración , Técnicas Genéticas , Genética/organización & administración , Humanos , Wolbachia/patogenicidad
3.
J Med Entomol ; 57(6): 1997-2007, 2020 11 13.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32533162

RESUMEN

Plague, caused by the flea-transmitted bacterial pathogen Yersinia pestis, is primarily a disease of wild rodents distributed in temperate and tropical zones worldwide. The ability of Y. pestis to develop a biofilm blockage that obstructs the flea foregut proventriculus facilitates its efficient transmission through regurgitation into the host bite site during flea blood sucking. While it is known that temperature influences transmission, it is not well-known if blockage dynamics are similarly in accord with temperature. Here, we determine the influence of the biologically relevant temperatures, 10 and 21°C, on blockage development in flea species, Xenopsylla cheopis (Rothschild) and Oropsylla montana (Baker), respectively, characterized by geographical distribution as cosmopolitan, tropical or endemic, temperate. We find that both species exhibit delayed development of blockage at 10°C. In Y. pestis infected X. cheopis, this is accompanied by significantly lower survival rates and slightly decreased blockage rates, even though these fleas maintain similar rates of persistent infection as at 21°C. Conversely, irrespective of infection status, O. montana withstand 21 and 10°C similarly well and show significant infection rate increases and slightly greater blocking rates at 10 versus 21°C, emphasizing that cooler temperatures are favorable for Y. pestis transmission from this species. These findings assert that temperature is a relevant parameter to consider in assessing flea transmission efficiency in distinct flea species residing in diverse geographical regions that host endemic plague foci. This is important to predict behavioral dynamics of plague regarding epizootic outbreaks and enzootic maintenance and improve timeous implementation of flea control programs.


Asunto(s)
Siphonaptera/microbiología , Yersinia pestis/fisiología , Animales , Femenino , Tracto Gastrointestinal/microbiología , Tracto Gastrointestinal/fisiología , Masculino , Factores Sexuales , Temperatura , Xenopsylla/microbiología
4.
Parasit Vectors ; 13(1): 335, 2020 Jul 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32611387

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: Yersinia pestis is the flea-transmitted etiological agent of bubonic plague. Sylvatic plague consists of complex tripartite interactions between diverse flea and wild rodent species, and pathogen strains. Transmission by flea bite occurs primarily by the Y. pestis biofilm-mediated foregut blockage and regurgitation mechanism, which has been largely detailed by studies in the model interaction between Y. pestis KIM6+ and Xenopsylla cheopis. Here, we test if pathogen-specific traits influence this interaction by determining the dynamics of foregut blockage development in X. cheopis fleas among extant avirulent pCD1-Y. pestis strains, KIM6+ and CO92, belonging to distinct biovars, and a non-circulating mutant CO92 strain (CO92gly), restored for glycerol fermentation; a key biochemical difference between the two biovars. METHODS: Separate flea cohorts infected with distinct strains were evaluated for (i) blockage development, bacterial burdens and flea foregut blockage pathology, and (ii) for the number of bacteria transmitted by regurgitation during membrane feeding. Strain burdens per flea was determined for fleas co-infected with CO92 and KIM6+ strains at a ratio of 1:1. RESULTS: Strains KIM6+ and CO92 developed foregut blockage at similar rates and peak temporal incidences, but the CO92gly strain showed significantly greater blockage rates that peak earlier post-infection. The KIM6+ strain, however, exhibited a distinctive foregut pathology wherein bacterial colonization extended the length of the esophagus up to the feeding mouthparts in ~65% of blocked fleas; in contrast to 32% and 26%, respectively, in fleas blocked with CO92 and CO92gly. The proximity of KIM6+ to the flea mouthparts in blocked fleas did not result in higher regurgitative transmission efficiencies as all strains transmitted variable numbers of Y. pestis, albeit slightly lower for CO92gly. During competitive co-infection, strains KIM6+ and CO92 were equally fit maintaining equivalent infection proportions in fleas over time. CONCLUSIONS: We demonstrate that disparate foregut blockage pathologies exhibited by distinct extant Y. pestis strain genotypes do not influence transmission efficiency from X. cheopis fleas. In fact, distinct extant Y. pestis genotypes maintain equivalently effective blockage and transmission efficiencies which is likely advantageous to maintaining continued successful plague spread and establishment of new plague foci.


Asunto(s)
Sistema Digestivo/patología , Xenopsylla/microbiología , Yersinia pestis , Animales , Biopelículas/crecimiento & desarrollo , Sistema Digestivo/microbiología , Variación Genética , Insectos Vectores/microbiología , Fenotipo , Peste/transmisión , Siphonaptera/microbiología , Yersinia pestis/genética , Yersinia pestis/patogenicidad
5.
Methods Mol Biol ; 2010: 153-166, 2019.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31177437

RESUMEN

Co-infection refers to the simultaneous infection of a host by multiple pathogenic organisms. Experimental co-infection studies using a mutant and its isogenic wild type have proven to be profoundly sensitive to analysis of pathogen factor mutation-associated fitness effects in in vivo models of infectious disease. Here we discuss the use of such co-infection experiments in studying the interaction between Yersinia pestis and its flea vector to more sensitively determine the critical bacterial determinants for Y. pestis survival, adaptation, and transmission from fleas. This chapter comprises two main sections, the first detailing how to infect fleas with mutant and wild type Y. pestis strains, and secondly how to process infected fleas and specifically quantify distinct Y. pestis strain burdens per flea. The Y. pestis competitive fitness co-infection model in fleas is insightful in evaluating the consequence of a mutation which may not be obvious in single-strain flea infections where there is less selective pressure.


Asunto(s)
Infestaciones por Pulgas/microbiología , Insectos Vectores/microbiología , Peste/transmisión , Siphonaptera/microbiología , Yersinia pestis/fisiología , Animales , Coinfección , Modelos Animales de Enfermedad , Ratones , Mutación , Peste/microbiología , Piel/microbiología , Yersinia pestis/genética
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