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Interaction of Bacteroides fragilis with host proteins and effects of nitrogen limitation on the B. fragilis transcriptome

Bacteroides fragilis is a member of the normal microbiota that resides in the human lower gastrointestinal tract. This bacterium is of clinical significance because it is the most frequently isolated Gram-negative obligate anaerobe from peritoneal abscesses and bloodstream infections. Human fibrinogen is a hexameric-glycoprotein that is important for fibrin-mediated abscess formation and limiting the spread of infection. B. fragilis can bind and degrade fibrinogen which may aid in its escape from abscesses into the bloodstream, thereby promoting bacteraemia. In addition to fibrinogen, binding of B. fragilis to fibronectin, a component of the extracellular matrix, found in association with fibrinogen at wound sites, has also been reported. An outer membrane protein, BF1705, expressed by B. fragilis was found to share homology with BspA from Tannerella forsythia which is known to bind fibrinogen. The gene encoding BF1705 was deleted from the B. fragilis NCTC 9343 genome in the present work using a markerless gene deletion technology. Proteins derived from the outer membranes of wild-type B. fragilis were able to bind fibronectin and fibrinogen in far-western blots. Similar protein extracts from the ΔBF1705 strain did not bind fibrinogen and fibronectin, which confirms the role of BF1705 in adhesive interactions with proteins of the host extracellular matrix. The possible involvement of BF1705 in fibrinogen degradation was ruled out because the ΔBF1705 strain still degraded fibrinogen. To identify the proteases involved in degradation of fibrinogen, four genes encoding putative extracellular metallo- and serine proteases in the size range 45-50 kDa were deleted from the NCTC 9343 genome. All of the single and multiple mutants defective in these selected proteases were still capable of degrading fibrinogen as determined by zymography. Expression of eight B. fragilis proteases in E. coli did not lead to detectable degradation of fibrinogen. These observations suggest that these proteases alone cannot degrade fibrinogen and either that an unidentified protease is responsible for degradation or that there is redundancy in the proteases involved. Under conditions of nitrogen limitation bacteria resort to scavenging nitrogen from the environment to replenish the depleting intracellular nitrogen content. By examining the differential regulation of the B. fragilis transcriptome under nitrogen replete and depleting conditions, a potential role for BF1705 and secreted proteases in nutrient binding and assimilation were studied. Growth on conventional glucose defined medium with ammonia as the nitrogen source was compared to growth in defined medium with glutamine as nitrogen source. A reduced doubling time and diauxic growth in the medium containing glutamine indicated nitrogen limitation. Comparison of the transcriptome derived from cultures of B. fragilis grown on either ammonia or glutamine by RNA-Seq did not reveal a significant upregulation of BF1705 in response to nitrogen limitation. This observation in conjunction with its inability to degrade fibrinogen suggests that the primary role of BF1705 might be as an adhesin and does not act directly in nutrient binding and degradation. Nevertheless, nitrogen limitation was found to induce the expression of four protease-encoding genes by over a 2-fold (adjusted p value < 0.05). The molecular weight of three of these proteases were identified to be within the size range of 45-55 kDa which corresponded to the lysis bands detected by fibrinogen zymography with wild-type B. fragilis protein extracts. Therefore the possible involvement of these three proteases in fibrinogen degradation could be assessed. A 155-fold upregulation (adjusted p value < 0.05) in asnB, encoding a homologue of asparagine synthetase B, under conditions of nitrogen limitation suggest a previously uncharacterised aspartate metabolism pathway for ammonia generation via arginine catabolism in B. fragilis. Ammonia thus formed might aid in sustaining B. fragilis growth under nitrogen deprived conditions. In addition to nitrogen assimilation, significant upregulation was observed in the expression of genes involved in regulation of oxidative stress and metronidazole resistance. The observed changes in the transcriptome will add to our understanding of the B. fragilis metabolism and potential assist with unravelling the mechanisms of infection mediated by this important opportunistic pathogen.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:bl.uk/oai:ethos.bl.uk:705448
Date January 2017
CreatorsShankar, Aparna
ContributorsBlakely, Garry ; Gallagher, Maurice
PublisherUniversity of Edinburgh
Source SetsEthos UK
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeElectronic Thesis or Dissertation
Sourcehttp://hdl.handle.net/1842/20959

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