Periplasmic thiol/disulfide oxidoreductases participate in the formation and isomerization of disulfide bonds and contribute to the virulence of pathogenic microorganisms. Among the systems encoded in the Salmonella genome, the system encoded by the scsABCD locus was shown to be required to cope with Cu and H2O2 stress. Here we report that this locus forms an operon whose transcription is driven by a promoter upstream of scsA and depends on CpxR/CpxA and on Cu. Furthermore, genes homologous to scsB, scsC, and scsD are always detected immediately downstream of scsA and in the same genetic arrangement in all scsA-harboring enterobacterial species. Also, a CpxR-binding site is detected upstream of scsA in most of those species, providing evidence of evolutionarily conserved function and regulation. Each individual scs gene shows a different role in copper and/or H2O2 resistance, indicating hierarchical contributions of these factors in the defense against these intoxicants. A protective effect of Cu preincubation against H2O2 toxicity and the increased Cu-mediated activation of cpxP in the ΔscsABCD mutant suggest that the CpxR/CpxA-controlled transcription of the ScsABCD system contributes to prevent Cu toxicity and to restore the redox balance at the Salmonella envelope.
CITATION STYLE
López, C., Checa, S. K., & Soncini, F. C. (2018). CpxR/CpxA controls scsABCD transcription to counteract copper and oxidative stress in Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium. Journal of Bacteriology, 200(16). https://doi.org/10.1128/JB.00126-18
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