Impact of orthologous gene replacement on the circuitry governing pilus gene transcription in streptococci.

The evolutionary history of several genes of the bacterial pathogen Streptococcus pyogenes strongly suggests an origin in another species, acquired via replacement of the counterpart gene (ortholog) following a recombination event. An example of orthologous gene replacement is provided by the nra/ro...

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Main Authors: Sergio Lizano, Feng Luo, Farah K Tengra, Debra E Bessen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2008-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2565503?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-bb3fdd7c533f4f5dbe7473f090cdf3282020-11-25T02:30:04ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032008-01-01310e345010.1371/journal.pone.0003450Impact of orthologous gene replacement on the circuitry governing pilus gene transcription in streptococci.Sergio LizanoFeng LuoFarah K TengraDebra E BessenThe evolutionary history of several genes of the bacterial pathogen Streptococcus pyogenes strongly suggests an origin in another species, acquired via replacement of the counterpart gene (ortholog) following a recombination event. An example of orthologous gene replacement is provided by the nra/rofA locus, which encodes a key regulator of pilus gene transcription. Of biological importance is the previous finding that the presence of the nra- and rofA-lineage alleles, which are approximately 35% divergent, correlates strongly with genetic markers for streptococcal infection at different tissue sites in the human host (skin, throat).In this report, the impact of orthologous gene replacement targeting the nra/rofA locus is experimentally addressed. Replacement of the native nra-lineage allele with a rofA-lineage allele, plus their respective upstream regions, preserved the polarity of Nra effects on pilus gene transcription (i.e., activation) in the skin strain Alab49. Increased pilus gene transcription in the rofA chimera correlated with a higher rate of bacterial growth at the skin. The transcriptional regulator MsmR, which represses nra and pilus gene transcription in the Alab49 parent strain, has a slight activating effect on pilus gene expression in the rofA chimera construct.Data show that exchange of orthologous forms of a regulatory gene is stable and robust, and pathogenicity is preserved. Yet, new phenotypes may also be introduced by altering the circuitry within a complex transcriptional regulatory network. It is proposed that orthologous gene replacement via interspecies exchange is an important mechanism in the evolution of highly recombining bacteria such as S. pyogenes.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2565503?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sergio Lizano
Feng Luo
Farah K Tengra
Debra E Bessen
spellingShingle Sergio Lizano
Feng Luo
Farah K Tengra
Debra E Bessen
Impact of orthologous gene replacement on the circuitry governing pilus gene transcription in streptococci.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Sergio Lizano
Feng Luo
Farah K Tengra
Debra E Bessen
author_sort Sergio Lizano
title Impact of orthologous gene replacement on the circuitry governing pilus gene transcription in streptococci.
title_short Impact of orthologous gene replacement on the circuitry governing pilus gene transcription in streptococci.
title_full Impact of orthologous gene replacement on the circuitry governing pilus gene transcription in streptococci.
title_fullStr Impact of orthologous gene replacement on the circuitry governing pilus gene transcription in streptococci.
title_full_unstemmed Impact of orthologous gene replacement on the circuitry governing pilus gene transcription in streptococci.
title_sort impact of orthologous gene replacement on the circuitry governing pilus gene transcription in streptococci.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2008-01-01
description The evolutionary history of several genes of the bacterial pathogen Streptococcus pyogenes strongly suggests an origin in another species, acquired via replacement of the counterpart gene (ortholog) following a recombination event. An example of orthologous gene replacement is provided by the nra/rofA locus, which encodes a key regulator of pilus gene transcription. Of biological importance is the previous finding that the presence of the nra- and rofA-lineage alleles, which are approximately 35% divergent, correlates strongly with genetic markers for streptococcal infection at different tissue sites in the human host (skin, throat).In this report, the impact of orthologous gene replacement targeting the nra/rofA locus is experimentally addressed. Replacement of the native nra-lineage allele with a rofA-lineage allele, plus their respective upstream regions, preserved the polarity of Nra effects on pilus gene transcription (i.e., activation) in the skin strain Alab49. Increased pilus gene transcription in the rofA chimera correlated with a higher rate of bacterial growth at the skin. The transcriptional regulator MsmR, which represses nra and pilus gene transcription in the Alab49 parent strain, has a slight activating effect on pilus gene expression in the rofA chimera construct.Data show that exchange of orthologous forms of a regulatory gene is stable and robust, and pathogenicity is preserved. Yet, new phenotypes may also be introduced by altering the circuitry within a complex transcriptional regulatory network. It is proposed that orthologous gene replacement via interspecies exchange is an important mechanism in the evolution of highly recombining bacteria such as S. pyogenes.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2565503?pdf=render
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