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Inactivation of Transcriptional Regulator FabT Influences Colony Phase Variation of Streptococcus pneumoniae
Author(s) -
Jinghui Zhang,
Weijie Ye,
Kaifeng Wu,
Shengnan Xiao,
Yuqiang Zheng,
Zhaoche Shu,
Yibing Yin,
Xuemei Zhang
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
mbio
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.562
H-Index - 121
eISSN - 2161-2129
pISSN - 2150-7511
DOI - 10.1128/mbio.01304-21
Subject(s) - streptococcus pneumoniae , regulator , microbiology and biotechnology , variation (astronomy) , phase variation , biology , gene , genetics , virulence , antibiotics , physics , astrophysics
Streptococcus pneumoniae is an opportunistic pathogen that can alter its cell surface phenotype in response to the host environment. We demonstrated that the transcriptional regulator FabT is an indirect regulator of capsular polysaccharide, an important virulence factor of Streptococcus pneumoniae . Transcriptome analysis between the wild-type D39s and D39Δ fabT mutant strains unexpectedly identified a differentially expressed gene encoding a site-specific recombinase, PsrA. PsrA catalyzes the inversion of 3 homologous hsdS genes in a type I restriction-modification (RM) system SpnD39III locus and is responsible for the reversible switch of phase variation. Our study demonstrated that upregulation of PsrA in a D39Δ fabT mutant correlated with an increased ratio of transparent (T) phase variants. Inactivation of the invertase PsrA led to uniform opaque (O) variants. Direct quantification of allelic variants of hsdS derivatives and inversions of inverted repeats indicated that the recombinase PsrA fully catalyzes the inversion mediated by IR1 and IR3, and FabT mediated the recombination of the hsdS alleles in PsrA-dependent and PsrA-independent manners. In addition, compared to D39s, the Δ fabT mutant exhibited reduced nasopharyngeal colonization and was more resistant to phagocytosis and less adhesive to epithelial cells. These results indicated that phase variation in the Δ fabT mutant also affects other cell surface components involved in host interactions.

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