Abstract

The iron overload disorder hereditary hemochromatosis (HH) predisposes humans to serious disseminated infection with pathogenic Yersinia as well as several other pathogens. Recently, we showed that the iron-sulfur cluster coordinating transcription factor IscR is required for type III secretion in Y. pseudotuberculosis by direct control of the T3SS master regulator LcrF. In E. coli and Yersinia, IscR levels are predicted to be regulated by iron bioavailability, oxygen tension, and oxidative stress, such that iron depletion should lead to increased IscR levels. To investigate how host iron overload influences Y. pseudotuberculosis virulence and the requirement for the Ysc type III secretion system (T3SS), we utilized two distinct murine models of HH: hemojuvelin knockout mice that mimic severe, early-onset HH as well as mice with the HfeC282Y∕C282Y mutation carried by 10% of people of Northern European descent, associated with adult-onset HH. Hjv−∕− and HfeC282Y∕C282Y transgenic mice displayed enhanced colonization of deep tissues by Y. pseudotuberculosis following oral inoculation, recapitulating enhanced susceptibility of humans with HH to disseminated infection with enteropathogenic Yersinia. Importantly, HH mice orally infected with Y. pseudotuberculosis lacking the T3SS-encoding virulence plasmid, pYV, displayed increased deep tissue colonization relative to wildtype mice. Consistent with previous reports using monocytes from HH vs. healthy donors, macrophages isolated from HfeC282Y∕C282Y mice were defective in Yersinia uptake compared to wildtype macrophages, indicating that the anti-phagocytic property of the Yersinia T3SS plays a less important role in HH animals. These data suggest that Yersinia may rely on distinct virulence factors to cause disease in healthy vs. HH hosts.

Highlights

  • Iron is an essential element for almost all microorganisms, with the exception of some examples including Lactobacillus plantarum and Borrelia burgdorferi (Archibald, 1983; Posey and Gherardini, 2000)

  • In order to better understand the biological significance of the influence of iron on Y. pseudotuberculosis pathogenesis, we studied susceptibility of murine models of hereditary hemochromatosis (HH) to Y. pseudotuberculosis infection

  • We demonstrate that two HH mouse models are more susceptible to disseminated infection with fully virulent Y. pseudotuberculosis than are wildtype mice, consistent with clinical data on humans with HH

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Summary

Introduction

Iron is an essential element for almost all microorganisms, with the exception of some examples including Lactobacillus plantarum and Borrelia burgdorferi (Archibald, 1983; Posey and Gherardini, 2000). Pathogenic bacteria often encounter iron-limiting conditions, during growth within mammalian hosts due to the success of host iron sequestration systems (Weinberg, 1978; Cassat and Skaar, 2013). These systems include binding of iron to the storage protein ferritin, complexing iron with heme, and the tight association of serum iron to transferrin (Cassat and Skaar, 2013).

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