4.4 Article Proceedings Paper

Malleilactone Is a Burkholderia pseudomallei Virulence Factor Regulated by Antibiotics and Quorum Sensing

期刊

JOURNAL OF BACTERIOLOGY
卷 200, 期 14, 页码 -

出版社

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/JB.00008-18

关键词

Burkholderia; quorum sensing; polyketide

资金

  1. University of Kansas
  2. NIH COBRE Center for Molecular Analysis of Disease Pathways Research Project Award [P20GM103638]
  3. NIH KU Legacy Chemical Methodologies and Library Development program [R24GM111385]
  4. COBRE CMADP Chemical Biology Core [P20GM103638]
  5. NIH [R01 CA211720, RO1 AI125529]
  6. NIH Shared Instrumentation Grant [S10RR024664]
  7. NSF Major Research Instrumentation Award [1625923]
  8. NSF [MCB-1615767]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Burkholderia pseudomallei, the causative agent of melioidosis, encodes almost a dozen predicted polyketide (PK) biosynthetic gene clusters. Many of these are regulated by LuxR-I-type acyl-homoserine (AHL) quorum-sensing systems. One of the PK gene clusters, the mal gene cluster, is conserved in the close relative Burkholderia thailandensis. The B. thailandensis mal genes code for the cytotoxin malleilactone and are regulated by a genetically linked LuxR-type transcription factor, MalR. Although AHLs typically interact with LuxR-type proteins to modulate gene transcription, the B. thailandensis MalR does not appear to be an AHL receptor. Here, we characterize the mal genes and MalR in B. pseudomallei. We use chemical analyses to demonstrate that the B. pseudomallei mal genes code for malleilactone. Our results show that MalR and the mal genes contribute to the ability of B. pseudomallei to kill Caenorhabditis elegans. In B. thailandensis, antibiotics like trimethoprim can activate MalR by driving transcription of the mal genes, and we demonstrate that some of the same antibiotics induce expression of B. pseudomallei malR. We also demonstrate that B. pseudomallei MalR does not respond directly to AHLs. Our results suggest that MalR is indirectly repressed by AHLs, possibly through a repressor, ScmR. We further show that malleilactone is a B. pseudomallei virulence factor and provide the foundation for understanding how malleilactone contributes to the pathology of melioidosis infections. IMPORTANCE Many bacterially produced polyketides are cytotoxic to mammalian cells and are potentially important contributors to pathogenesis during infection. We are interested in the polyketide gene clusters present in Burkholderia pseudomallei, which causes the often-fatal human disease melioidosis. Using knowledge gained by studies in the close relative Burkholderia thailandensis, we show that one of the B. pseudomallei polyketide biosynthetic clusters produces a cytotoxic polyketide, malleilactone. Malleilactone contributes to B. pseudomallei virulence in a Caenorhabditis elegans infection model and is regulated by an orphan LuxR family quorum-sensing transcription factor, MalR. Our studies demonstrate that malleilactone biosynthesis or MalR could be new targets for developing therapeutics to treat melioidosis.

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