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  • 1
    ISSN: 1365-2958
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Summary The flagellar system of Helicobacter pylori, which comprises more than 40 mostly unclustered genes, is essential for colonization of the human stomach mucosa. In order to elucidate the complex transcriptional circuitry of flagellar biosynthesis in H. pylori and its link to other cell functions, mutants in regulatory genes governing flagellar biosynthesis (rpoN, flgR, flhA, flhF, HP0244) and whole-genome microarray technology were used in this study. The regulon controlled by RpoN, its activator FlgR (FleR) and the cognate histidine kinase HP0244 (FleS) was characterized on a genome-wide scale for the first time. Seven novel genes (HP1076, HP1233, HP1154/1155, HP0366/367, HP0869) were identified as belonging to RpoN-associated flagellar regulons. The hydrogenase accessory gene HP0869 was the only annotated non-flagellar gene in the RpoN regulon. Flagellar basal body components FlhA and FlhF were characterized as functional equivalents to master regulators in H. pylori, as their absence led to a general reduction of transcripts in the RpoN (class 2) and FliA (class 3) regulons, and of 24 genes newly attributed to intermediate regulons, under the control of two or more promoters. FlhA- and FlhF-dependent regulons comprised flagellar and non-flagellar genes. Transcriptome analysis revealed that negative feedback regulation of the FliA regulon was dependent on the antisigma factor FlgM. FlgM was also involved in FlhA- but not FlhF-dependent feedback control of the RpoN regulon. In contrast to other bacteria, chemotaxis and flagellar motor genes were not controlled by FliA or RpoN. A true master regulator of flagellar biosynthesis is absent in H. pylori, consistent with the essential role of flagellar motility and chemotaxis for this organism.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1365-2958
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Helicobacter pylori is thought to regulate gene ex-pression with a very small set of regulatory genes. We identified a previously unannotated open reading frame (ORF) in the H. pylori 26695 genome (HP1122) as a putative H. pylori flgM gene (σ28 factor antagonist) by a motif-based bioinformatic approach. Deletion of HP1122 resulted in a fourfold increase in transcription of the σ28-dependent major flagellin gene flaA, supporting the function of HP1122 as H. pylori FlgM. Helicobacter pylori FlgM lacks a conserved 20-amino-acid N-terminal domain of enterobacterial FlgM proteins, but was able to interact with the Salmonella typhimuriumσ28 (FliA) and inhibit the expression of FliA-dependent genes in Salmonella. Helicobacter pylori FlgM inhibited FliA to the same extent in a Salmonella strain with an intact flagellar export system and in an export-deficient strain. Helicobacter pylori FliA was able to drive transcription of FliA-dependent genes in Salmonella. The effects of mutations in the H. pylori flgM and fliA genes on the H. pylori transcriptome were analysed using whole genome DNA microarrays. The antagonistic roles of FlgM and FliA in controlling the transcription of the major flagellin gene flaA were confirmed, and two additional FliA/FlgM dependent operons (HP472 and HP1051/HP1052) were identified. None of the three genes contained in these operons has a known function in flagellar biogenesis in other bacteria. Like other motile bacteria, H. pylori has a FliA/FlgM pair of sigma and anti-sigma factors, but the genes controlled by these differ markedly from the Salmonella/Escherichia coli paradigm.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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