Abstract

BackgroundHaemophilus influenzae is a significant cause of childhood otitis media, and also has an absolute growth requirement for heme. Recent microarray studies using three H. influenzae isolates were used to propose a putative core of genes responsive to iron and heme levels. Included in the core modulon were thirty seven genes that are preferentially expressed under iron/heme limitation, most of which are directly involved with iron and or heme acquisition. In this report, the core iron/heme modulon was further refined following microarray analysis of two additional nontypeable H. influenzae isolates from patients with otitis media. The transcriptional status of the genes comprising the refined iron/heme core modulon was then assessed in vivo, in a chinchilla model of otitis media. These in vivo experiments were performed to address the hypothesis that iron and heme regulated genes are both highly expressed in vivo and important, during clinical infection.ResultsMicroarray analysis of two additional H. influenzae strains resulted in the definition of a core of iron/heme responsive genes. This core consisted of 35 genes maximally expressed under heme restriction and a further 20 genes maximally expressed in heme replete conditions. In vivo studies were performed with two nontypeable H. influenzae strains, 86-028NP and HI1722. The majority of operons identified as members of the core modulon by microarray were also actively upregulated in the chinchilla ear during otitis media. In 86-028NP, 70% of the operons were significantly upregulated while in HI1722 100% of the operons were upregulated in samples recovered from the chinchilla middle ear.ConclusionThis study elucidates a conserved core of H. influenzae genes the transcription of which is altered by the availability of iron and heme in the growth environment, and further assesses transcription of these genes in vivo. Elucidation of this modulon allows for identification of genes with unrecognized roles in iron/heme acquisition or homeostasis and/or potential roles in virulence. Defining these core genes is also of potential importance in identifying targets for therapeutic and vaccine designs since products of these genes are likely to be preferentially expressed during growth in iron/heme restricted sites of the human body.

Highlights

  • Haemophilus influenzae is a significant cause of childhood otitis media, and has an absolute growth requirement for heme

  • Utilization of hemoglobin, the hemoglobin-haptoglobin complex, heme-hemopexin and heme-albumin complexes by H. influenzae requires a functional tonB gene indicating that uptake of heme from these host sources is mediated by TonB-dependent outer membrane proteins (TD-OMPs) [15,16,17]

  • Using a set of test genes that included hitA, tbp1, hxuC and ompP2, we found that the kinetics of FeHm-mediated transcriptional regulation were similar to those observed for the three previously studied H. influenzae strains

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Summary

Introduction

Haemophilus influenzae is a significant cause of childhood otitis media, and has an absolute growth requirement for heme. Previous studies have characterized both the potential human sources of iron and heme, including transferrin, hemoglobin, hemoglobin-haptoglobin, and the heme-hemopexin and heme-albumin complexes [4,5,6], as well as many of the OMPs mediating their utilization. These include the hemoglobin/hemoglobinhaptoglobin-binding TD-OMPs (Hgps) [20,21,22], thehemeutilization TD-OMP (Hup) [23], and the heme-hemopexin TD-OMP (Hxu) are regulated by the environmental availability of FeHm, and are preferentially transcribed under FeHm-restricted growth conditions [24,25]

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