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ABSTRACT: Importance
Salmonella enterica is a major pathogen responsible for foodborne gastroenteritis, and a leading model organism for genetic and molecular studies of bacterial virulence mechanisms. One key trait of this pathogen is the ability to survive within infected host cells. During infection, the bacteria employ a type three secretion system that deliver effector proteins to target and manipulate host cell processes. The transcriptional regulation of this virulence program is well understood. By contrast, the factors and mechanisms operating at the post-transcriptional level to control virulence gene expression are less clear. In this study, we have charted the global RNA ligand repertoire of the RNA-binding protein ProQ during in vitro conditions mimicking the host cell environment. This identified hundreds of binding sites and revealed ProQ-dependent stabilization of intracellular-specific small RNAs. Importantly, we show that ProQ post-transcriptionally activates the expression of PhoP, a master transcriptional activator of intracellular virulence in Salmonella.
SUBMITTER: Bergman S
PROVIDER: S-EPMC10964419 | biostudies-literature | 2024 Mar
REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature
mSphere 20240227 3
Gastrointestinal disease caused by <i>Salmonella enterica</i> is associated with the pathogen's ability to replicate within epithelial cells and macrophages. Upon host cell entry, the bacteria express a type-three secretion system encoded within <i>Salmonella</i> pathogenicity island 2, through which host-manipulating effector proteins are secreted to establish a stable intracellular niche. Transcription of this intracellular virulence program is activated by the PhoPQ two-component system that ...[more]