Identification of a two-component system involved in antimicrobial peptide resistance in Streptococcus pneumoniae
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ABSTRACT: Two-component regulatory systems (TCS) are one of the most widespread mechanism that bacteria use to sense and respond to environmental changes. In Streptococcus pneumoniae, a total of 13 TCS and one orphan response regulator have been identified and many of them have been linked to pathogenicity. Notably, TCS01 strongly contributed to pneumococcal virulence in several infection models. However, it remains one of the least studied TCS in pneumococci and its functional role is still unclear. In this study, we demonstrate that TCS01 upregulates a BceAB-type ATP-Binding Cassette (ABC) transporter that mediates resistance to several antimicrobial peptides targeting lipid II. Even though Tcs01 and BceAB genes are localized far apart from each other in the genome, disruption of either of them equally sensitized the bacterium to the same antimicrobial peptides. Although it is still poorly understood how S. pneumoniae can switch from a harmless colonizer of the human nasopharynx to a serious pathogen causing a variety of diseases, TCS01 likely contributes to the physiopathology of this organism by cooperating with a BceAB-type transporter to sense and induce resistance to antimicrobial peptides encountered in the human host.
INSTRUMENT(S): Q Exactive HF
ORGANISM(S): Streptococcus Pneumoniae (ncbitaxon:1313)
SUBMITTER: Cedric ORELLE
PROVIDER: MSV000089094 | MassIVE | Tue Mar 22 02:14:00 GMT 2022
REPOSITORIES: MassIVE
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