Long-Distance Effects of H-NS Binding in the Control of <i>hilD</i> Expression in the Salmonella SPI1 Locus
Marinos Kalafatis, James M. Slauch
Abstract
Members of the foodborne pathogen Salmonella rely on a type III secretion system to invade intestinal epithelial cells and initiate infection. This system was acquired through horizontal gene transfer, essentially creating the Salmonella genus. Expression of this critical virulence factor is controlled by a complex regulatory network. The nucleoid protein H-NS is a global repressor of horizontally acquired genomic loci. Here, we identify the critical site of H-NS regulation in this system and show that alterations to the DNA over a surprisingly large region affect this regulation, providing important information regarding the mechanism of H-NS action.
Topics & Concepts
BiologyPathogenicity islandPsychological repressionRepressorPromoterTranscription (linguistics)Transcription factorCell biologyGeneticsGeneGene expressionVirulencePhilosophyLinguisticsSalmonella and Campylobacter epidemiologyEscherichia coli research studiesViral gastroenteritis research and epidemiology