4.4 Article

Role of RpoS in Regulating Stationary Phase Salmonella Typhimurium Pathogenesis-Related Stress Responses under Physiological Low Fluid Shear Force Conditions

期刊

MSPHERE
卷 7, 期 4, 页码 -

出版社

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/msphere.00210-22

关键词

Salmonella; RpoS; fluid shear; stationary-phase; rotating wall vessel; biomechanical forces; mechanobiology; mechanotransduction; stress responses; acid stress; bile salt stress; thermal stress; oxidative stress; pathogenesis; infection; intestinal epithelium; sigma(S) (sigma S); sigma(38) (sigma 38); sigma factor

资金

  1. Rebecca J. Forsyth Discovery Scholar Award at Arizona State University

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The discovery that biomechanical forces regulate microbial virulence has shed light on the importance of physiological low fluid shear (LFS) forces in altering gene expression, stress responses, and virulence of Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium. This study investigated the role of RpoS in regulating the responses of Salmonella to physiological LFS, and found that while RpoS was important for handling oxidative and thermal stresses, it was dispensable for acid and bile salts stresses, as well as for adherence and survival within intestinal epithelial cells. These findings enhance our understanding of how physiological fluid shear forces modulate the physiology of S. Typhimurium and provide insights into its responses in the infected host.
The discovery that biomechanical forces regulate microbial virulence was established with the finding that physiological low fluid shear (LFS) forces altered gene expression, stress responses, and virulence of the enteric pathogen Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium during the log phase. These log phase LFS-induced phenotypes were independent of the master stress response regulator, RpoS (sigma(S)). Given the central importance of RpoS in regulating stationary-phase stress responses of S. Typhimurium cultured under conventional shake flask and static conditions, we examined its role in stationary-phase cultures grown under physiological LFS. We constructed an isogenic rpoS mutant derivative of wild-type S. Typhimurium and compared the ability of these strains to survive in vitro pathogenesis-related stresses that mimic those encountered in the infected host and environment. We also compared the ability of these strains to colonize (adhere, invade, and survive within) human intestinal epithelial cell cultures. Unexpectedly, LFS-induced resistance of stationary-phase S. Typhimurium cultures to acid and bile salts stresses did not rely on RpoS. Likewise, RpoS was dispensable for stationary-phase LFS cultures to adhere to and survive within intestinal epithelial cells. In contrast, the resistance of these cultures to challenges of oxidative and thermal stresses, and their invasion into intestinal epithelial cells was influenced by RpoS. These findings expand our mechanistic understanding of how physiological fluid shear forces modulate stationary-phase S. Typhimurium physiology in unexpected ways and provide clues into microbial mechanobiology and nuances of Salmonella responses to microenvironmental niches in the infected host. IMPORTANCE Bacterial pathogens respond dynamically to a variety of stresses in the infected host, including physical forces of fluid flow (fluid shear) across their surfaces. While pathogens experience wide fluctuations in fluid shear during infection, little is known about how these forces regulate microbial pathogenesis. This is especially important for stationary-phase bacterial growth, which is a critical period to understand microbial resistance, survival, and infection potential, and is regulated in many bacteria by the general stationary-phase stress response protein RpoS. Here, we showed that, unlike conventional culture conditions, several stationary-phase Salmonella pathogenic stress responses were not impacted by RpoS when bacteria were cultured under fluid shear conditions relevant to those encountered in the intestine of the infected host. These findings offer new insight into how physiological fluid shear forces encountered by Salmonella during infection might impact pathogenic responses in unexpected ways that are relevant to their disease-causing ability.

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