Abstract

Iron is essential for growth and development of Chlamydia. Its long-term starvation in cultured mammalian cells leads to production of aberrant noninfectious chlamydial forms, also known as persistence. Immediate transcriptional responses to iron limitation have not been characterized, leaving a knowledge gap of how Chlamydia regulates its response to changes in iron availability. We used the fast-chelating agent 2,2'-bipyridyl (BPDL) to homogeneously starve Chlamydia trachomatis serovar L2 of iron, starting at 6 or 12h postinfection. Immediate transcriptional responses were monitored after only 3 or 6h of BPDL treatment, well before formation of aberrant Chlamydia. The first genomewide transcriptional response of C.trachomatis to iron starvation was subsequently determined utilizing RNA sequencing. Only 7% and 8% of the genome were differentially expressed in response to iron starvation at the early and middle stages of development, respectively. Biological pathway analysis revealed an overarching theme. Synthesis of macromolecular precursors (deoxynucleotides, amino acids, charged tRNAs, and acetyl coenzyme A [acetyl-CoA]) was upregulated, while energy-expensive processes (ABC transport and translation) were downregulated. A large fraction of differentially downregulated genes are involved in translation, including those encoding ribosome assembly and initiation and termination factors, which could be analogous to the translation downregulation triggered by stress in other prokaryotes during stringent responses. Additionally, transcriptional upregulation of DNA repair, oxidative stress, and tryptophan salvage genes reveals a possible coordination of responses to multiple antimicrobial and immunological insults. These responses of replicative-phase Chlamydia to iron starvation indicate a prioritization of survival over replication, enabling the pathogen to "stock the pantry" with ingredients needed for rapid growth once optimal iron levels are restored. IMPORTANCE By utilizing an experimental approach that monitors the immediate global response of Chlamydia trachomatis to iron starvation, clues to long-standing issues in Chlamydia biology are revealed, including how Chlamydia adapts to this stress. We determined that this pathogen initiates a transcriptional program that prioritizes replenishment of nutrient stores over replication, possibly in preparation for rapid growth once optimal iron levels are restored. Transcription of genes for biosynthesis of metabolic precursors was generally upregulated, while those involved in multiple steps of translation were downregulated. We also observed an increase in transcription of genes involved in DNA repair and neutralizing oxidative stress, indicating that Chlamydia employs an "all-or-nothing" strategy. Its small genome limits its ability to tailor a specific response to a particular stress. Therefore, the "all-or-nothing" strategy may be the most efficient way of surviving within the host, where the pathogen likely encounters multiple simultaneous immunological and nutritional insults.

Highlights

  • Iron is essential for growth and development of Chlamydia

  • As many as 17% of females infected with C. trachomatis develop long-term infections in the genital tract, which can result in serious complications such as pelvic inflammatory disease (PID), fallopian-tube scarring, and ectopic pregnancy, all of which are major risk factors for tubal factor infertility (TFI) [2]

  • We chose to begin starvation during midcycle development (12 h p.i.) instead of at the beginning of infection for two reasons: (i) to test the response of actively replicating Chlamydia bacteria that are able to maximally respond to stress and (ii) to ensure that the treated and mock-treated Chlamydia bacteria remained in the same stage of development (RB)

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Summary

Introduction

Iron is essential for growth and development of Chlamydia. Its longterm starvation in cultured mammalian cells leads to production of aberrant noninfectious chlamydial forms, known as persistence. Transcriptional upregulation of DNA repair, oxidative stress, and tryptophan salvage genes reveals a possible coordination of responses to multiple antimicrobial and immunological insults These responses of replicative-phase Chlamydia to iron starvation indicate a prioritization of survival over replication, enabling the pathogen to “stock the pantry” with ingredients needed for rapid growth once optimal iron levels are restored. IMPORTANCE By utilizing an experimental approach that monitors the immediate global response of Chlamydia trachomatis to iron starvation, clues to long-standing issues in Chlamydia biology are revealed, including how Chlamydia adapts to this stress We determined that this pathogen initiates a transcriptional program that prioritizes replenishment of nutrient stores over replication, possibly in preparation for rapid growth once optimal iron levels are restored. Persistent Chlamydia bacteria are resistant to both antibiotics and host immunity mechanisms and can recover from this state upon removal of stress or addition of missing nutrients [14,15,16,17]

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