AI Article Synopsis

  • The type three secretion system (T3SS), located in the pathogenicity island 1 (SPI1), is crucial for bacterial invasion of the host's intestinal lining, and its expression is regulated by three proteins: HilD, HilC, and RtsA.
  • HilD plays a central role in activating the SPI1 T3SS by responding to various signals, while HilE acts as a negative regulator that inhibits HilD's ability to bind DNA, thus controlling the timing of SPI1 activation.
  • Research shows that HilE specifically binds to HilD but not to its other regulatory partners and helps prevent the premature activation of the SPI1 system until conditions are optimal, ensuring effective bacterial invasion and disease induction.

Article Abstract

The type three secretion system (T3SS), encoded in the pathogenicity island 1 (SPI1) locus, mediates the invasion of the host intestinal epithelium. SPI1 expression is dependent upon three AraC-like regulators: HilD, HilC, and RtsA. These regulators act in a complex feed-forward loop to activate each other and , which encodes the activator of the T3SS structural genes. HilD has been shown to be the major integration point of most signals known to activate the expression of the SPI1 T3SS, acting as a switch to control induction of the system. HilE is a negative regulator that acts upon HilD. Here we provide genetic and biochemical data showing that HilE specifically binds to HilD but not to HilC or RtsA. This protein-protein interaction blocks the ability of HilD to bind DNA as shown by both an reporter system and an gel shift assay. HilE does not affect HilD dimerization, nor does it control the stability of the HilD protein. We also investigated the role of HilE during the infection of mice using competition assays. Although deletion of does not confer a phenotype, the mutation does suppress the invasion defect conferred by loss of FliZ, which acts as a positive signal controlling HilD protein activity. Together, these data suggest that HilE functions to restrict low-level HilD activity, preventing premature activation of SPI1 until positive inputs reach a threshold required to fully induce the system. is a leading cause of gastrointestinal and systemic disease throughout the world. The SPI1 T3SS is required for to induce inflammatory diarrhea and to gain access to underlying tissue. A complex regulatory network controls expression of SPI1 in response to numerous physiological inputs. Most of these signals impinge primarily on HilD translation or activity. The system is triggered when HilD activity crosses a threshold that allows efficient activation of its own promoter. This threshold is set by HilE, which binds to HilD to prevent the inevitable minor fluctuations in HilD activity from inappropriately activating the system. The circuit also serves as a paradigm for systems that must integrate numerous environmental parameters to control regulatory output.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5869468PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/JB.00750-17DOI Listing

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