is a globally important pathogen responsible for the severe epidemic diarrheal disease called cholera. The current and ongoing seventh pandemic of cholera is caused by El Tor strains, which have completely replaced the sixth-pandemic classical strains of To successfully establish infection and disseminate to new victims, relies on key virulence factors encoded on horizontally acquired genetic elements. The expression of these factors relies on the regulatory architecture that coordinates the timely expression of virulence determinants during host infection. Here, we apply transcriptomics and structural modeling to understand how type VI secretion system regulator A (TsrA) affects gene expression in both the classical and El Tor biotypes of We find that TsrA acts as a negative regulator of virulence genes encoded on horizontally acquired genetic elements. The TsrA regulon comprises genes encoding cholera toxin (CT), the toxin-coregulated pilus (TCP), and the type VI secretion system (T6SS), as well as genes involved in biofilm formation. The majority of the TsrA regulon is carried on horizontally acquired AT-rich genetic islands whose loss or acquisition could be directly ascribed to the differences between the classical and El Tor strains studied. Our modeling predicts that the TsrA protein is a structural homolog of the histone-like nucleoid structuring protein (H-NS) oligomerization domain and is likely capable of forming higher-order superhelical structures, potentially with DNA. These findings describe how TsrA can integrate into the intricate virulence gene expression program, controlling gene expression through transcriptional silencing. Pathogenic strains express multiple virulence factors that are encoded by bacteriophage and chromosomal islands. These include cholera toxin and the intestinal colonization pilus called the toxin-coregulated pilus, which are essential for causing severe disease in humans. However, it is presently unclear how the expression of these horizontally acquired accessory virulence genes can be efficiently integrated with preexisting transcriptional programs that are presumably fine-tuned for optimal expression in before its conversion to a human pathogen. Here, we report the role of a transcriptional regulator (TsrA) in silencing horizontally acquired genes encoding important virulence factors. We propose that this factor could be critical to the efficient acquisition of accessory virulence genes by silencing their expression until other signals trigger their transcriptional activation within the host.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7701989PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mBio.02901-20DOI Listing

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