Abstract

Avian pathogenic Escherichia coli (APEC) causes avian colibacillosis in poultry, which is characterized by systemic infections such as septicemia, air sacculitis, and pericarditis. APEC uses two-component regulatory systems (TCSs) to handle the stressful environments present in infected hosts. While many TCSs in E. coli have been well characterized, the RstA/RstB system in APEC has not been thoroughly investigated. The involvement of the RstA regulator in APEC pathogenesis was demonstrated during previous studies investigating its role in APEC persistence in chicken macrophages and respiratory infections. However, the mechanism underlying this phenomenon has not been clarified. Transcriptional analysis of the effect of rstAB deletion was therefore performed to improve the understanding of the RstA/RstB regulatory mechanism, and particularly its role in virulence. The transcriptomes of the rstAB mutant and the wild-type strain E058 were compared during their growth in the bloodstreams of challenged chickens. Overall, 198 differentially expressed (DE) genes were identified, and these indicated that RstA/RstB mainly regulates systems involved in nitrogen metabolism, iron acquisition, and acid resistance. Phenotypic assays indicated that the rstAB mutant responded more to an acidic pH than the wild-type strain did, possibly because of the repression of the acid-resistance operons hdeABD and gadABE by the deletion of rstAB. Based on the reported RstA box motif TACATNTNGTTACA, we identified four possible RstA target genes (hdeD, fadE, narG, and metE) among the DE genes. An electrophoretic mobility shift assay confirmed that RstA binds directly to the promoter of hdeD, and β-galactosidase assays showed that hdeD expression was reduced by rstAB deletion, indicating that RstA directly regulates hdeD expression. The hdeD mutation resulted in virulence attenuation in both cultured chicken macrophages and experimentally infected chickens. In conclusion, our data suggest that RstA affects APEC E058 virulence partly by directly regulating the acidic resistance gene hdeD.

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