Abstract

Listeria monocytogenes, the causative agent of listeriosis, is a virulent foodborne Gram-positive bacterial pathogen, with 20-30% mortality. It has a broad ability to transport iron, either in the form of ferric siderophores, or by extracting it from mammalian iron binding proteins. In this review we focus on the mechanisms of ferric siderophore and haem transport into the listerial cell. Despite the fact that it does not synthesize siderophores, L. monocytogenes transports ferric siderophores in the wild environment by the actions of cytoplasmic membrane ABC-transporter systems. The bacterium acquires haem, on the other hand, by two mechanisms. At low (nanomolar) concentrations, sortase B-dependent, peptidoglycan-anchored proteins scavenge the iron porphyrin in human or animal tissues, and transfer it to the underlying ABC-transporters in the cytoplasmic membrane for uptake. At concentrations at or above 50 nM, however, haem transport becomes sortase-independent, and occurs by direct interactions of the iron porphyrin with the same ABC-transporter complexes. The architecture of the Gram-positive cell envelope plays a fundamental role in these mechanisms, and the haem acquisition abilities of L. monocytogenes are an element of its ability to cause infectious disease.

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