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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

sigmaB modulates virulence determinant expression and stress resistance: characterization of a functional rsbU strain derived from Staphylococcus aureus 8325-4.

TLDR
It is suggested that SarA is not likely to be the effector in the overall sigmaB-mediated effect on agr expression, and the levels of SarA were found to be similar in strains 8325-4 and SH1000 (8325- 4 rsbU(+)) and sigB mutant derivatives of these strains.
Abstract
The accessory sigma factor σB controls a general stress response that is thought to be important for Staphylococcus aureus survival and may contribute to virulence. The strain of choice for genetic studies, 8325-4, carries a small deletion in rsbU, which encodes a positive regulator of σB activity. Consequently, to enable the role of σB in virulence to be addressed, we constructed an rsbU+ derivative, SH1000, using a method that does not leave behind an antibiotic resistance marker. The phenotypic properties of SH1000 (8325-4 rsbU+) were characterized and compared to those of 8325-4, the rsbU mutant, parent strain. A recognition site for σB was located in the promoter region of katA, the gene encoding the sole catalase of S. aureus, by primer extension analysis. However, catalase expression and activity were similar in SH1000 (8325-4 rsbU+), suggesting that this promoter may have a minor role in catalase expression under normal conditions. Restoration of σB activity in SH1000 (8325-4 rsbU+) resulted in a marked decrease in the levels of the exoproteins SspA and Hla, and this is likely to be mediated by reduced expression of agr in this strain. By using Western blotting and a sarA-lacZ reporter assay, the levels of SarA were found to be similar in strains 8325-4 and SH1000 (8325-4 rsbU+) and sigB mutant derivatives of these strains. This finding contrasts with previous reports that suggested that SarA expression levels are altered when they are measured transcriptionally. Inactivation of sarA in each of these strains resulted in an expected decrease in agr expression; however, the relative level of agr in SH1000 (8325-4 rsbU+) remained less than the relative levels in 8325-4 and the sigB mutant derivatives. We suggest that SarA is not likely to be the effector in the overall σB-mediated effect on agr expression.

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Citations
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Autoinduction and signal transduction in the regulation of staphylococcal virulence

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agr-Mediated Dispersal of Staphylococcus aureus Biofilms

TL;DR: It is reported that repression of agr is necessary to form a biofilm and that reactivation of agR in established biofilms through AIP addition or glucose depletion triggers detachment, and that the dispersal mechanism requires extracellular protease activity.
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Staphylococcus aureus Panton-Valentine Leukocidin Causes Necrotizing Pneumonia

TL;DR: It is shown that PVL is sufficient to cause pneumonia and that the expression of this leukotoxin induces global changes in transcriptional levels of genes encoding secreted and cell wall–anchored staphylococcal proteins, including the lung inflammatory factor staphlyococcal protein A (Spa).
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IL-17 is essential for host defense against cutaneous Staphylococcus aureus infection in mice

TL;DR: In this article, the authors used a mouse model of S. aureus cutaneous infection to investigate the contribution of T cells to host defense, and they found that mice deficient in γδ but not αβ T cells had substantially larger skin lesions with higher bacterial counts and impaired neutrophil recruitment compared with WT mice.
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Differential roles of poly-N-acetylglucosamine surface polysaccharide and extracellular DNA in Staphylococcus aureus and Staphylococcus epidermidis biofilms.

TL;DR: It is concluded that PNAG and ecDNA play fundamentally different structural roles in S. aureus and S. epidermidis biofilms, which are major human pathogens of increasing importance due to the dissemination of antibiotic-resistant strains.
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Synthesis of staphylococcal virulence factors is controlled by a regulatory RNA molecule.

TL;DR: It is shown that the cloned RNAIII determinant restores both positive and negative regulatory functions of agr to an agr‐null strain and that the RNA itself, rather than any protein, is the effector molecule.
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