Science, Vol.276, No.5310, 250-253, 1997
Regulation of Lipid a Modifications by Salmonella-Typhimurium Virulence Genes Phop-Phoq
Bacterial pathogenesis requires proteins that sense host microenvironments and respond by regulating virulence gene transcription. For Salmonellae, one such regulatory system is PhoP-PhoQ, which regulates genes required for intracellular survival and resistance to cationic peptides. Analysis by mass spectrometry revealed that Salmonella typhimurium PhoP-PhoQ regulated structural modifications of lipid A, the host signaling portion of lipopolysaccharide (LPS), by the addition of aminoarabinose and 2-hydroxymyristate. Structurally modified lipid A altered LPS-mediated expression of the adhesion molecule E-selectin by endothelial cells and tumor necrosis factor-alpha expression by adherent monocytes. Thus, altered responses to environmentally induced lipid A structural modifications may represent a mechanism for bacteria to gain advantage within host tissues.
Keywords:TANDEM MASS-SPECTROMETRY;ELECTROSPRAY-IONIZATION;STRUCTURAL DETERMINATION;BACTERIAL-ENDOTOXINS;BINDING-PROTEIN;PMRA MUTANTS;SOLUBLE CD14;LIPOPOLYSACCHARIDES;EXPRESSION;RESISTANCE