Abstract

Actinobacillus suis is an important swine pathogen. As with other pathogens, the ability of A. suis to acquire iron within the host is crucial for virulence. Here, we investigated the ability of seven strains of A. suis to acquire iron from haemoglobins. In growth assays, all strains could use porcine, bovine and human haemoglobins as iron sources for growth. Using solid phase binding assays, membranes derived from all strains, grown under iron-restricted conditions, were shown to bind all three haemoglobins. Competition binding assays indicated that these haemoglobins were bound by the same receptor and an affinity procedure allowed the isolation and identification of an iron-repressible, haemoglobin-binding polypeptide (∼105 kDa) from all strains. Nucleotide sequence analyses revealed that A. suis possesses a gene ( hgbA) that encodes a homologue of the Actinobacillus pleuropneumoniae haemoglobin-binding protein, HgbA. hgbA, encoding a mature protein of 105 kDa, was shown to be preceded by a hugZ homologue; putative promoter sequences and a putative Fur box were located upstream of hugZ and RT-PCR revealed that hugZ and hgbA are co-transcribed and iron-repressible. It is concluded that the acquisition of haemoglobin-bound iron by A. suis involves a single-component receptor that is up-regulated in response to iron restriction.

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