4.7 Article

The Prc and CtpA proteases modulate cell-surface signaling activity and virulence in Pseudomonas aeruginosa

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ISCIENCE
卷 26, 期 7, 页码 -

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CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.isci.2023.107216

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Cell-surface signaling (CSS) is a signal transfer system in Gram-negative bacteria that activates the sigma(ECF) factor in response to an extracellular signal. This activation involves regulated proteolysis of the associated anti-sigma factor by Prc and RseP proteases. In this study, we have discovered another protease, CtpA, that modulates CSS activity by preventing Prc-mediated proteolysis of the anti-sigma factor. Importantly, mutations in rseP and ctpA proteases of Pseudomonas aeruginosa attenuate virulence, while the prc mutation increases virulence by enhancing membrane vesicle production.
Cell-surface signaling (CSS) is a signal transfer system of Gram-negative bacteria that produces the activation of an extracytoplasmic function s factor (sigma(ECF)) in the cytosol in response to an extracellular signal. Activation requires the regulated and sequential proteolysis of the sigma(ECF)-associated anti-sigma factor, and the function of the Prc and RseP proteases. In this work, we have identified another protease that modulates CSS activity, namely the periplasmic carboxyl-terminal processing protease CtpA. CtpA functions upstream of Prc in the proteolytic cascade and seems to prevent the Prc-mediated proteolysis of the CSS anti-sigma factor. Importantly, using zebrafish embryos and the A549 lung epithelial cell line as hosts, we show that mutants in the rseP and ctpA proteases of the human pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa are considerably attenuated in virulence while the prc mutation increases virulence likely by enhancing the production of membrane vesicles.

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