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    Home > Biochemistry News > Biotechnology News > How small RNAs affect Salmonella infection

    How small RNAs affect Salmonella infection

    • Last Update: 2023-02-03
    • Source: Internet
    • Author: User
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    Salmonella is a foodborne pathogen
    that infects millions of people each year.
    Infection by these bacteria relies on a complex network of genes and gene products that enable them to sense environmental conditions
    .
    In a new paper, researchers at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign study how small RNAs help salmonella express its virulence genes
    .

    When infecting humans, Salmonella first invades intestinal cells
    through a needle-like structure called the type III secretion system.
    This structure injects proteins directly into cells, triggering a cascade of changes that cause inflammation and eventually diarrhea
    .
    The genes encoding this system, along with other genes needed for invasion, are located in a DNA region
    called Salmonella Pathogenic Island 1 (SPI-1).

    Sabrina Abdulla, lead author of the study, said: "SPI-1 needs to be well controlled
    .
    If a type III secretory system cannot be produced, Salmonella will not cause infection, but if the needle-like structure is produced too much, Salmonella will get sick
    .

    As a result, SPI-1 is subject to strict regulatory network controls
    .
    First, three transcription factors, HilD, HilC, and RtsA, control their own and each other's DNA expression
    .
    They also activated another transcription factor, HilA, which activates the rest of the SPI-1 gene
    .
    If that's not complicated enough, SPI-1 also needs to sense environmental cues and adjust its gene expression in order to infect the host
    .

    "We have known for a long time that there are many environmental factors that influence the gene regulation
    of Salmonella.
    However, we don't know how to do that
    .
    Since then, researchers have focused on small RNA," Abdulla said
    .

    Small RNAs (sRNA) determine how genes function
    in bacterial cells.
    Typically, these molecules either interact with proteins or mRNA
    .
    As a result, sRNA affects a variety of bacterial functions, including virulence and response to
    the environment.

    In this study, they analyzed in depth the sRNA that regulates hilD mRNA, specifically a sequence on the mRNA 3' untranslated region, which is not involved in the production of
    the HilD protein.
    In bacteria, 3' UTRs typically contain 50-100 nucleotides
    .
    However, the 3' UTR of hilD mRNA is up to 300 nucleotides
    long.

    "We observed a 60-fold increase in the expression of the hilD gene after deletion of the 3' UTR," Abdulla said
    .
    "So we decided to look for sRNA
    that might interact with the region.
    "

    The researchers found that although both sRNAs, Spot 42 and SdsR, can target 3' UTR, their regions of action differ
    .
    "This result suggests that the entire 3'UTR is important for regulation," Abdulla said
    .
    "We found that sRNA stabilizes hilD mRNA and protects it from degradation
    .
    "

    The researchers also used mice to see if Spot 42 and SdsR affected Salmonella infection
    .
    They conducted mouse competition experiments, introducing mutant bacteria lacking sRNA and normal bacteria containing sRNA to see which strains survived and caused infection
    .
    "We found that when the sRNA is deleted, the bacteria cannot survive
    in the host.
    We also showed that sRNA plays a role in helping SPI-1 invade host cells," Abdulla said
    .

    "Now we know that sRNA plays an important role in controlling SPI-1, but we also want to expand our research
    in two directions.
    " We wanted to understand how sRNA affects the mRNA level of hilD at the molecular level
    .
    We also want to better understand how sRNA regulates the expression of other important SPI-1 genes," said
    corresponding author Cari Vanderpool, professor of microbiology.

    Original search

    Small RNAs Activate Salmonella Pathogenicity Island 1 by Modulating mRNA Stability through the hilD mRNA 3′ Untranslated Region


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