Abstract
Outcome of infection depends upon complex interactions between the invading pathogen and the host. As part of the host's innate immune response, the release of reactive oxygen and nitrogen species by phagocytes represents a major obstacle to the establishment of infection. The ability of the human parasite Entamoeba histolytica to survive reactive oxygen and nitrogen species is central to its pathogenic potential and contributes to disease outcome. In order to define the transcriptional network associated with oxidative stress, we utilized the MEME and MAST programs to analyze the promoter regions of 57 amoebic genes that had increased expression specifically in response to H(2)O(2) exposure. We functionally characterized an H(2)O(2)-regulatory motif (HRM) ((1)AAACCTCAATGAAGA(15)), which was enriched in these promoters and specifically bound amoebic nuclear protein(s). Assays with promoter-luciferase fusions established the importance of key residues and that the HRM motif directly impacted the ability of H(2)O(2)-responsive promoters to drive gene expression. DNA affinity chromatography and mass spectrometry identified EHI_108720 as an HRM DNA-binding protein. Overexpression and down-regulation of EHI_108720 demonstrated the specificity of EHI_108720 protein binding to the HRM, and overexpression increased basal expression from an H(2)O(2)-responsive wild-type promoter but not from its mutant counterpart. Thus, EHI_108720, or HRM-binding protein, represents a new stress-responsive transcription factor in E. histolytica that controls a transcriptional regulatory network associated with oxidative stress. Overexpression of EHI_108720 increased parasite virulence. Insight into how E. histolytica responds to oxidative stress increases our understanding of how this important human pathogen establishes invasive disease.
Highlights
How gene expression is regulated in response to oxidative stress is unknown in Entamoeba histolytica
In order to identify promoter motifs in H2O2responsive genes, we narrowed this list of genes to those that were up-regulated by the H2O2 stress
Genes that were up-regulated by nitric oxide (NO) and/or heat shock were removed from this list (82 genes for NO, 13 genes for heat shock, and 21 genes for both NO and heat shock); in total, 116 genes were removed [2, 29]
Summary
How gene expression is regulated in response to oxidative stress is unknown in Entamoeba histolytica. We utilized a combined DNA affinity chromatography and mass spectrometry approach to identify the HRM-binding protein (HRM-BP), EHI_108720 This protein interacts with the HRM, and manipulation of HRM-BP expression levels altered basal expression and stress responsiveness of an H2O2-responsive promoter. These data represent the first steps in elucidating the transcriptional network responsible for coordinating changes in gene expression following H2O2 exposure in the important human pathogen E. histolytica
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