2006
DOI: 10.1128/iai.74.5.3060-3064.2006
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Role of the Histone-Like Nucleoid Structuring Protein in Colonization, Motility, and Bile-Dependent Repression of Virulence Gene Expression in Vibrio cholerae

Abstract: Bile-mediated repression of virulence gene expression is relieved in a Vibrio cholerae hns mutant. The mutant also exhibited reduced motility due to lower flrA expression, higher in vivo production of the virulence factors, and lower colonization efficiency. The colonization defect of the mutant was due to low FlrA production.Vibrio cholerae, a gram-negative, noninvasive enteric bacterium is the causative agent of the diarrheal disease cholera (13). Cholera continues to be a cause of human mortality, especiall… Show more

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Cited by 41 publications
(38 citation statements)
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“…Consistent with this role, H-NS has been shown to silence virulence gene expression in V. cholerae by acting at different levels of the ToxR regulatory cascade, which includes the toxT, tcpA, and ctxA promoters (37). Further, V. cholerae hns mutants have been reported to exhibit diminished motility and intestinal colonization capacity (18,27,49,53). There are numerous evidences indicating that repression by H-NS can be relieved in response to environmental stimuli that activate the expression of other regulators whose binding site overlaps with that of H-NS.…”
mentioning
confidence: 74%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Consistent with this role, H-NS has been shown to silence virulence gene expression in V. cholerae by acting at different levels of the ToxR regulatory cascade, which includes the toxT, tcpA, and ctxA promoters (37). Further, V. cholerae hns mutants have been reported to exhibit diminished motility and intestinal colonization capacity (18,27,49,53). There are numerous evidences indicating that repression by H-NS can be relieved in response to environmental stimuli that activate the expression of other regulators whose binding site overlaps with that of H-NS.…”
mentioning
confidence: 74%
“…The general stress response regulator RpoS and the nucleoid structuring protein H-NS are global regulators known to affect intestinal colonization, virulence gene expression, and mucosal escape in the cholera bacterium (18,27,32,35,49). Here, we focus on the role of these proteins in the transcription of motility regulators rpoN and flrA as well as hapA, encoding HA/protease.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Examples include H-NS-repressed virulence genes in pathogenic E. coli (Bustamante et al, 2001;Corbett et al, 2007;Haack et al, 2003;Laaberki et al, 2006;Müller et al, 2006;Torres et al, 2007), Erwinia spp. (Nasser & Reverchon, 2002), Proteus mirabilis (Coker et al, 2000), Shigella flexneri Prosseda et al, 2004), Vibrio cholerae (Ghosh et al, 2006;Nye et al, 2000) and Yersinia spp. (Cathelyn et al, 2007;Ellison & Miller, 2006b;Heroven et al, 2007).…”
Section: H-ns and Transcription Repressionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The histone-like protein H-NS was shown to silence the inv promoter in a complex with YmoA, a member of the Hha regulator family (Ellison et al, 2004;Lawrenz & Miller, 2007). H-NS is necessary for the nucleoid packaging of the bacterial chromosome and regulates a variety of genes depending on temperature (Atlung & Ingmer, 1997;Ghosh et al, 2006;Müller et al, 2006). Gene silencing mediated by H-NS is caused by preferentially binding to AT-rich DNA sequences displaying intrinsic curvatures (Olivares-Zavaleta et al, 2006;Rimsky, 2004;Schröder & Wagner, 2002).…”
Section: Rova and H-ns Interact Preferentially With Is1667-sequences mentioning
confidence: 99%