Transcriptional factors play an important role in gene regulation in all organisms, especially in Bacteria. Here special emphasis is placed in the AraC/XylS family of transcriptional regulators. This is one of the most abundant as many predicted members have been identified and more members are added because more bacterial genomes are sequenced. Given the way more experimental evidence has mounded in the past decades, we decided to update the information about this captivating family of proteins. Using bioinformatics tools on all the data available for experimentally characterized members of this family, we found that many members that display a similar functional classification can be clustered together and in some cases they have a similar regulatory scheme. A proposal for grouping these proteins is also discussed. Additionally, an analysis of surveyed proteins in bacterial genomes is presented. Altogether, the current review presents a panoramic view into this family and we hope it helps to stimulate future research in the field.
Expression of virulence factors in non-typhoidal Salmonella enterica depends on a wide variety of general and specific transcriptional factors that act in response to multiple environmental signals. Expression of genes for cellular invasion located in the Salmonella pathogenicity island 1 (SPI-1) is tightly regulated by several transcriptional regulators arrayed in a cascade, while repression of this system is exerted mainly by H-NS. In SPI-1, H-NS represses the expression mainly by binding to the regulatory region of hilA and derepression is exercised mainly by HilD. However, the possible regulatory role of H-NS in genes downstream from HilD and HilA, such as those regulated by InvF, has not been fully explored. Here the role of H-NS on the expression of sopB , an InvF dependent gene encoded in SPI-5, was evaluated. Our data show that InvF is required for the expression of sopB even in the absence of H-NS. Furthermore, in agreement with previous results on other InvF-regulated genes, we found that the expression of sopB requires the InvF/SicA complex. Our results support that SicA is not required for DNA binding nor for increasing affinity of InvF to DNA in vitro . Moreover, by using a bacterial two-hybrid system we were able to identify interactions between SicA and InvF. Lastly, protein-protein interaction assays suggest that InvF functions as a monomer. Derived from these results we postulate that the InvF/SicA complex does not act on sopB as an anti-H-NS factor; instead, it seems to induce the expression of sopB by acting as a classical transcriptional regulator.
Extracts of Hibiscus sabdariffa L. (commonly called Rosselle or “Jamaica flower” in Mexico) have been shown to have antibiotic and antivirulence properties in several bacteria. Here, an organic extract of H. sabdariffa L. is shown to inhibit motility in Salmonella enterica serovars Typhi and Typhimurium. The compound responsible for this effect was purified and found to be the hibiscus acid. When tested, this compound also inhibited motility and reduced the secretion of both flagellin and type III secretion effectors. Purified hibiscus acid was not toxic in tissue-cultured eukaryotic cells, and it was able to reduce the invasion of Salmonella Typhimurium in epithelial cells. Initial steps to understand its mode of action showed it might affect membrane proton balance.
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