Gene regulation of infection-associated L-tartrate metabolism in Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium

Enteric pathogens such as serovar Typhimurium experience spatial and temporal changes to the metabolic landscape throughout infection. Host reactive oxygen and nitrogen species non-enzymatically convert monosaccharides to alpha hydroxy acids, including L-tartrate. utilizes L-tartrate early during in...

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Published inbioRxiv : the preprint server for biology
Main Authors Rojas, Vivian K, Winter, Maria G, Jimenez, Angel G, Tanner, Natasha W, Crockett, Stacey L, Spiga, Luisella, Hendrixson, David R, Winter, Sebastian E
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States 06.02.2024
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Summary:Enteric pathogens such as serovar Typhimurium experience spatial and temporal changes to the metabolic landscape throughout infection. Host reactive oxygen and nitrogen species non-enzymatically convert monosaccharides to alpha hydroxy acids, including L-tartrate. utilizes L-tartrate early during infection to support fumarate respiration, while L-tartrate utilization ceases at later time points due to the increased availability of exogenous electron acceptors such as tetrathionate, nitrate, and oxygen. It remains unknown how regulates its gene expression to metabolically adapt to changing nutritional environments. Here, we investigated how the transcriptional regulation for L-tartrate metabolism in is influenced by infection-relevant cues. L-tartrate induces the transcription of , genes involved in L-tartrate utilization. L-tartrate metabolism is negatively regulated by two previously uncharacterized transcriptional regulators TtdV (STM3357) and TtdW (STM3358), and both TtdV and TtdW are required for sensing of L-tartrate. The electron acceptors nitrate, tetrathionate, and oxygen repress transcription via the two-component system ArcAB. Furthermore, regulation of L-tartrate metabolism is required for optimal fitness in a mouse model of -induced colitis. TtdV, TtdW, and ArcAB allow for the integration of two cues, substrate availability and availability of exogenous electron acceptors, to control L-tartrate metabolism. Our findings provide novel insights into how prioritizes utilization of different electron acceptors for respiration as it experiences transitional nutrient availability throughout infection. Bacterial pathogens must adapt their gene expression profiles to cope with diverse environments encountered during infection. This coordinated process is carried out by the integration of cues that the pathogen senses to fine-tune gene expression in a spatiotemporal manner. Many studies have elucidated the regulatory mechanisms on how sense metabolites in the gut to activate or repress its virulence program, however our understanding of how coordinates its gene expression to maximize the utilization of carbon and energy sources found in transitional nutrient niches is not well understood. In this study, we discovered how integrates two infection-relevant cues, substrate availability and exogenous electron acceptors, to control L-tartrate metabolism. From our experiments, we propose a model for how L-tartrate metabolism is regulated in response to different metabolic cues in addition to characterizing two previously unknown transcriptional regulators. This study expands our understanding of how microbes combine metabolic cues to enhance fitness during infection.