Lon Protease- and Temperature-Dependent Activity of a Lysis Cassette Located in the Insecticidal Island of Yersinia enterocolitica.

J Bacteriol

ZIEL-Institute for Food & Health and Lehrstuhl für Mikrobielle Ökologie, Department Biowissenschaftliche Grundlagen, Technische Universität München, Freising, Germany

Published: February 2021

The genus comprises pathogens that can adapt to an environmental life cycle stage as well as to mammals. strain W22703 exhibits both insecticidal and nematocidal activity conferred by the tripartite toxin complex (Tc) that is encoded on the 19-kb pathogenicity island Tc-PAI All genes follow a strict temperature regulation in that they are silenced at 37°C but activated at lower temperatures. Four highly conserved phage-related genes, located within the Tc-PAI , were recently demonstrated to encode a biologically functional holin-endolysin gene cassette that lyses its own host W22703 at 37°C. Conditions transcriptionally activating the cassette are not yet known. In contrast to , the overproduction of holin and endolysin did not result in cell lysis of strain W22703 at 15°C. When the holin-endolysin genes were overexpressed at 15°C in four biovars and in four other spp., a heterogenous pattern of phenotypes was observed, ranging from lysis resistance of a biovar 1A strain to the complete growth arrest of a strain. To decipher the molecular mechanism underlying this temperature-dependent lysis, we constructed a Lon protease-negative mutant of W22703 in which the overexpression of the lysis cassette leads to cell death at 15°C. Overexpressed endolysin exhibited a high proteolytic susceptibility in strain W22703 but remained stable in the W22703 Δ strain or in Although artificial overexpression was applied here, the data indicate that Lon protease plays a role in the control of the temperature-dependent lysis in W22703. The investigation of the mechanisms that help pathogens survive in the environment is a prerequisite to understanding their evolution and their virulence capacities. In members of the genus , many factors involved in virulence, metabolism, motility, or biofilm formation follow a strict temperature-dependent regulation. While the molecular mechanisms underlying the activation of determinants at body temperature have been analyzed in detail, the molecular basis of low-temperature-dependent phenotypes is largely unknown. Here, we demonstrate that a novel phage-related lysis cassette, which is part of the insecticidal and nematocidal pathogenicity island of , does not lyse its own host following overexpression at 15°C and that the Lon protease is involved in this phenotype.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7890549PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/JB.00616-20DOI Listing

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