Abstract

Intracellular bacterial pathogens have evolved distinct lifestyles inside eukaryotic cells. Some pathogens coexist with the infected cell in an obligate intracellular state, whereas others transit between the extracellular and intracellular environment. Adaptation to these intracellular lifestyles is regulated in both space and time. Non-coding small RNAs (sRNAs) are post-transcriptional regulatory molecules that fine-tune important processes in bacterial physiology including cell envelope architecture, intermediate metabolism, bacterial communication, biofilm formation, and virulence. Recent studies have shown production of defined sRNA species by intracellular bacteria located inside eukaryotic cells. The molecules targeted by these sRNAs and their expression dynamics along the intracellular infection cycle remain, however, poorly characterized. Technical difficulties linked to the isolation of “intact” intracellular bacteria from infected host cells might explain why sRNA regulation in these specialized pathogens is still a largely unexplored field. Transition from the extracellular to the intracellular lifestyle provides an ideal scenario in which regulatory sRNAs are intended to participate; so much work must be done in this direction. This review focuses on sRNAs expressed by intracellular bacterial pathogens during the infection of eukaryotic cells, strategies used with these pathogens to identify sRNAs required for virulence, and the experimental technical challenges associated to this type of studies. We also discuss varied techniques for their potential application to study RNA regulation in intracellular bacterial infections.

Highlights

  • Genome expression studies based on high-density tiling arrays and RNA deep sequencing (RNA-seq) show that a relatively high percentage of the bacterial genome is transcribed as non-coding RNA molecules (Gripenland et al, 2010; Sorek and Cossart, 2010; Lasa et al, 2012)

  • This review focuses on small intergenic RNAs (sRNA) expressed by intracellular bacterial pathogens during the infection of eukaryotic cells, strategies used with these pathogens to identify sRNAs required for virulence, and the experimental technical challenges associated to this type of studies

  • Genome expression studies based on high-density tiling arrays and RNA deep sequencing (RNA-seq) show that a relatively high percentage of the bacterial genome is transcribed as non-coding RNA molecules (Gripenland et al, 2010; Sorek and Cossart, 2010; Lasa et al, 2012)

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Summary

CELLULAR AND INFECTION MICROBIOLOGY

Non-coding RNA regulation in pathogenic bacteria located inside eukaryotic cells. Intracellular bacterial pathogens have evolved distinct lifestyles inside eukaryotic cells. Some pathogens coexist with the infected cell in an obligate intracellular state, whereas others transit between the extracellular and intracellular environment. Adaptation to these intracellular lifestyles is regulated in both space and time. Recent studies have shown production of defined sRNA species by intracellular bacteria located inside eukaryotic cells. This review focuses on sRNAs expressed by intracellular bacterial pathogens during the infection of eukaryotic cells, strategies used with these pathogens to identify sRNAs required for virulence, and the experimental technical challenges associated to this type of studies.

INTRODUCTION
RNA regulation in intracellular bacteria
Francisella turalensis
Survival inside
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Unaltered Down
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