AI Article Synopsis

  • Streptococcus pyogenes shows variability in pilus production based on its serotype and temperature, particularly in the M49 strain, where pilus production is regulated by the Nra protein.
  • The study found that Nra acts as a positive regulator of pilus genes, with its levels increasing when the temperature drops, influencing the bacteria's ability to produce pili effectively.
  • A specific stem-loop structure in the nra mRNA impacts how well the mRNA is translated, and altering this structure affects Nra levels and consequently pilus production, which may enhance the bacteria's survival in human tissues.

Article Abstract

Streptococcus pyogenes produces a diverse variety of pili in a serotype-dependent manner and thermosensitive expression of pilus biogenesis genes was previously observed in a serotype M49 strain. However, the precise mechanism and biological significance remain unclear. Herein, the pilus expression analysis revealed the thermosensitive pilus production only in strains possessing the transcriptional regulator Nra. Experimental data obtained for nra deletion and conditional nra-expressing strains in the background of an M49 strain and the Lactococcus heterologous expression system, indicated that Nra is a positive regulator of pilus genes and also highlighted the importance of the level of intracellular Nra for the thermoregulation of pilus expression. While the nra mRNA level was not significantly influenced by a temperature shift, the Nra protein level was concomitantly increased when the culture temperature was decreased. Intriguingly, a putative stem-loop structure within the coding region of nra mRNA was a factor related to the post-transcriptional efficiency of nra mRNA translation. Either deletion of the stem-loop structure or introduction of silent chromosomal mutations designed to melt the structure attenuated Nra levels, resulting in decreased pilus production. Consequently, the temperature-dependent translational efficacy of nra mRNA influenced pilus thermoregulation, thereby potentially contributing to the fitness of nra-positive S. pyogenes in human tissues.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7079067PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/mmi.14408DOI Listing

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