L17 Virulence: Mechanisms of Gene Regulation II Flashcards

1
Q

What is cholera?

A

Life-threatening diarrheal disease

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2
Q

What is the causative agent of cholera?

A

Vibrio cholerae

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3
Q

What are the physical characteristics of V. cholerae?

A
  1. Highly motile
  2. Uni-flagellated
  3. Gram-negative
  4. Curved rod
  5. Extracellular pathogen
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4
Q

What must occur for V. cholerae to cause disease?

A
  1. Be ingested via contaminated food or water
  2. Survive passage through the gastric acid barrier of the stomach
  3. Colonize the upper SI
  4. Produce and excrete toxin
  5. Disseminate in a watery diarrhea
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5
Q

What is the main virulence factor of cholera?

A

Cholera toxin (mutants lacking toxin genes are much less virulent)

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6
Q

What are the two subunits of the cholera toxin?

A

A and B

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7
Q

The ctxA ctxB operan is carried by the ___.

A

Lysogenic CTX prophage

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8
Q

Describe how the 1 A subunit exerts its effects.

A
  1. A is cleaved to yield an active A1 subunit.
  2. A1 catalyzes ADP-ribosylation of the regulatory G protein, G-alpha-s
  3. G-alpha-s activates adenylyl cyclase
  4. Adenylyl cyclase increases cAMP levels
  5. cAMP activates PKA
  6. PKA phosphorylates transporters, causing efflux of ions and water
  7. Unregulated ion transport causes water to leak into the intestinal lumen, leading to severe, watery diarrhea
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9
Q

What are the 5 B subunits required for?

A

Secretion of A1 toxin out of the bacterial cell and interaction with the host cell surface receptor, GM1 glycoprotein

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10
Q

Describe how a single polar flagellum functions as a virulence factor in colonization.

A

Motility is used to reach the site of colonization. Flagellar genes are expressed when toxin genes are not; motility genes are turned off at the site of colonization and toxigenic genes are turned on. Note that non-motile and hyper-motile strains are less virulent.

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11
Q

What are the virulence factors required for adherence to host epithelial cells?

A
  1. TCP (toxin co-regulated pilus)

2. ACF (accessory colonization factors)

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12
Q

What happens when there are mutations in the TCP or ACF genes?

A

Colonization decreases

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13
Q

Where are the TCP and ACF genes located?

A

On a large pathogenicity island termed the TCP-ACF element

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14
Q

What is ToxR?

A

Protein that acts as the global virulence regulator

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15
Q

Activation of the ToxR regulon permits what?

A

Synthesis of virulence factors

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16
Q

What is ToxS?

A

Protein that acts as the environmental sensor

17
Q

ToxR and ToxS form an operon. How is transcription of these genes regulated?

A

Via temperature

18
Q

What happens to the toxRS operon at low temperatures?

A

At low temperatures (outside the host), the operon is on. ToxR and ToxS are synthesized and incorporated into the membrane.

19
Q

What happens to the toxRS operon at high temperatures (in the upper GI tract)?

A

ToxRS is off; the proteins are not synthesized, but the old proteins are still present in the membrane

20
Q

What happens to the toxRS operon at high temperatures (intestine)?

A

ToxS receives a signal unique to the intestine environment. It communicates this information to ToxR. ToxRS activates ToxT synthesis.

21
Q

What does ToxT do?

A

ToxT autoregulates and increases transcription of itself. ToxT also activates transcription of the TCP-ACF pathogenicity island. Finally, ToxT regulates transcription of the ctxA ctxB operon carried by the lysogenic CTX prophage, leading to the Ctx toxin.

22
Q

What are the components of the ToxR regulon?

A
  1. Stimulus: unknown (lumenal)
  2. Sensor: ToxS
  3. Regulator: ToxR (also ToxT, technically)
  4. Member genes: toxT, tcp, acf, ctxab