Vibrio cholerae is the causative agent of cholera, which continues to be a major public health concern in Asia, Africa and Latin America. The bacterium can persist outside the human host and alternates between planktonic and biofilm community lifestyles. Transition between the different lifestyles is mediated by multiple signal transduction pathways including quorum sensing. Expression of the Zn-metalloprotease haemagglutinin (HA)/protease is subject to a dual regulation which involves the quorum-sensing regulator HapR and the cAMP receptor protein. In a previous study, we observed that a mutant defective in the cAMP-receptor protein (CRP) expressed lower levels of HapR. To further investigate the role of CRP in modulating HapR and other signal transduction pathways, we performed global gene expression profiling of a Dcrp mutant of El Tor biotype V. cholerae. Here we show that CRP is required for the biosynthesis of cholera autoinducer 1 (CAI-1) and affects the expression of multiple HapR-regulated genes. As expected, the Dcrp mutant produced more cholera toxin and enhanced biofilm. Expression of flagellar genes, reported to be affected in DhapR mutants, was diminished in the Dcrp mutant. However, an epistasis analysis indicated that cAMP-CRP affects motility by a mechanism independent of HapR. Inactivation of crp inhibited the expression of multiple genes reported to be strongly induced in vivo and to affect the ability of V. cholerae to colonize the small intestine and cause disease. These genes included ompU, ompT and ompW encoding outer-membrane proteins, the alternative sigma factor s E required for intestinal colonization, and genes involved in anaerobic energy metabolism. Our results indicate that CRP plays a crucial role in the V. cholerae life cycle by affecting quorum sensing and multiple genes required for survival of V. cholerae in the human host and the environment.
Vibrio cholerae can switch between motile and biofilm lifestyles. The last decades have been marked by a remarkable increase in our knowledge of the structure, regulation, and function of biofilms formed under laboratory conditions. Evidence has grown suggesting that V. cholerae can form biofilm-like aggregates during infection that could play a critical role in pathogenesis and disease transmission. However, the structure and regulation of biofilms formed during infection, as well as their role in intestinal colonization and virulence, remains poorly understood. Here, we review (i) the evidence for biofilm formation during infection, (ii) the coordinate regulation of biofilm and virulence gene expression, and (iii) the host signals that favor V. cholerae transitions between alternative lifestyles during intestinal colonization, and (iv) we discuss a model for the role of V. cholerae biofilms in pathogenicity.
Vibrio cholerae is a highly motile organism that secretes a Zn-dependent metalloprotease, hemagglutinin/protease (HapA). HapA has been shown to have mucinase activity and contribute to the reactogenicity of live vaccine candidates, but its role in cholera pathogenesis is not yet clear. The contribution of motility to pathogenesis is not fully understood, since conflicting results have been obtained with different strains, mutants, and animal models. The objective of this work was to determine the contribution of HapA and motility to the pathogenesis of El Tor biotype cholera. To this end we constructed isogenic motility (motY) and mucinase (hapA) single and double mutants of an El Tor biotype V. cholerae strain. Mutants were characterized for the expression of major virulence factors in vitro and in vivo. The motility mutant showed a remarkable increase in cholera toxin (CT), toxin coregulated pilus major subunit (TcpA), and HapA production in vitro. Increased TcpA and CT production could be explained by increased transcription of tcpA, ctxA, and toxT. No effect was detected on the transcription of hapA in the motility mutant. The sodium ionophore monensin diminished production of HapA in the parent but not in the motility mutant. Phenamil, a specific inhibitor of the flagellar motor, diminished CT production in the wild-type and motY strains. The hapA mutant showed increased binding to mucin. In contrast, the motY mutation diminished adherence to biotic and abiotic surfaces including mucin. Lack of HapA did not affect colonization in the suckling mouse model. The motility and mucinase defects did not prevent induction of ctxA and tcpA in the mouse intestine as measured by recombinasebased in vivo expression technology. Analysis of mutants in the rabbit ileal loop model showed that both V. cholerae motility and HapA were necessary for full expression of enterotoxicity.Cholera is an acute diarrheal disease characterized by the passing of voluminous rice water stool. Vibrio cholerae of serogroups O1 and O139 continues to cause seasonal cholera outbreaks that affect highly populated regions in Asia, Africa, and Latin America. V. cholerae is a highly motile organism with a single sheathed polar flagellum. It colonizes the small intestine and expresses a variety of virulence determinants, such as the toxin-coregulated pilus (TCP), cholera toxin (CT), and other factors required to multiply and survive in the host.V. cholerae produces a soluble Zn-metalloprotease, hemagglutinin/protease (HapA), encoded by hapA (18). HapA can proteolytically degrade several physiologically important host proteins including mucin (10). HapA perturbs the paracellular barrier of cultured intestinal epithelial cells (33, 46) by acting on tight junction-associated proteins (47). Inactivation of hapA increased adherence to mucin synthesized by HT29-18N2 cells (4), and expression of hapA was required for V. cholerae to penetrate a mucin-containing gel in vitro (42). Although analysis of hapA mutants in infant rabbits and suckling mice has not ...
Vibrio cholerae of both biotypes produce a soluble Zn 2+ -dependent metalloprotease:haemagglutinin/protease (Hap), encoded by hapA. Hap has been shown to have mucinolytic and cytotoxic activity. These activities are likely to play an important role in the pathogenesis of cholera and the reactogenicity of attenuated vaccine strains. Production of Hap requires transcriptional activation by the HapR regulator and is repressed by glucose. The present study shows that mucin purified from two sources, bile salts, and growth at 37˚C enhanced Hap protease production. Analysis of hapA and hapR promoter fusions with the lacZ gene showed both promoters to be activated in a cell-density-dependent pattern. Glucose repressed and mucin induced the hapA promoter by a HapR-independent mechanism. Bile had no effect on either hapR or hapA promoter activity. Expression of hapA was required for vibrios to translocate through a mucin-containing gel. These results suggest Hap to play an important role in cholera pathogenesis by promoting mucin gel penetration, detachment and spreading of infection along the gastrointestinal tract.
Vibrio cholerae secretes a Zn-dependent metalloprotease, hemagglutinin/protease (HA/protease), which is encoded by hapA and displays a broad range of potentially pathogenic activities. Production of HA/protease requires transcriptional activation by the quorum-sensing regulator HapR. In this study we demonstrate that transcription of hapA is growth phase dependent and specifically activated in the deceleration and stationary growth phases. Addition of glucose in these phases repressed hapA transcription by inducing V. cholerae to resume exponential growth, which in turn diminished the expression of a rpoS-lacZ transcriptional fusion. Contrary to a previous observation, we demonstrate that transcription of hapA requires the rpoS-encoded s factor. The cyclic AMP (cAMP) receptor protein (CRP) strongly enhanced hapA transcription in the deceleration phase. Analysis of rpoS and hapR mRNA in isogenic CRP ؉ and CRP ؊ strains suggested that CRP enhances the transcription of rpoS and hapR. Analysis of strains containing hapR-lacZ and hapA-lacZ fusions confirmed that hapA is transcribed in response to concurrent quorum-sensing and nutrient limitation stimuli. Mutations inactivating the stringent response regulator RelA and the HapR-controlled AphA regulator did not affect HA/protease expression. Electrophoretic mobility shift experiments showed that pure cAMP-CRP and HapR alone do not bind the hapA promoter. This result suggests that HapR activation of hapA differs from its interaction with the aphA promoter and could involve additional factors.
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