Characterisation of the alternative sigma factor SigAB in Acinetobacter baumannii
Citation:
O'Driscoll, Eoghan, Characterisation of the alternative sigma factor SigAB in Acinetobacter baumannii, Trinity College Dublin, School of Genetics & Microbiology, Microbiology, 2025Download Item:
Abstract:
Acinetobacter baumannii is a priority pathogen and is known to be a leading cause of
nosocomial infections worldwide. It is associated with a variety of illnesses including
septicaemia, pneumonia, and urinary tract infections (UTIs). It readily acquires resistances
to antimicrobials making it extremely difficult to treat in hospital settings. It is an
opportunistic pathogen that generally infects people who already have a compromised
immune system. A. baumannii survives in a variety of environmental conditions and
readily forms biofilms which allow it to persist in hospital settings making it even more
dangerous especially due to its capacity to persist on biomedical devices like catheters
and ventilators.
Despite the dangers posed by A. baumannii, there is still relatively little known about how
A. baumannii regulates the expression of various metabolic pathways and how it initiates
various stress responses to mitigate environmental stressors. It is crucial to develop a
comprehensive understanding of the mechanisms utilised by this bacteria to regulate its
metabolism and physiology to adapt to its environment as well as its transcriptional
changes in response to various conditions. This knowledge can then be utilised to develop
novel treatments and identify drug targets for this pathogen of global concern.
One aspect of the regulatory arsenal of A. baumannii that up until now has been
understudied are the sigma factor including the alternative sigma factor SigAB. Extra
cytoplasmic function (ECF) sigma factors allow bacteria to regulate gene expression by
binding to specific promoter regions of the genes in their regulon causing initiation of
transcription. ECF sigma factors have been implicated in a variety of biological roles from
general stress responses to virulence and antimicrobial resistance.
A conserved alternative sigma factor of A. baumannii is SigAB, and this conservation
points towards it playing an important role. This study sought to investigate this sigma
factor to elucidate its biological function as well as to identify its regulon. A series of
phenotypic growth experiments were carried out that identified that a ΔsigAB deletion
mutant suffered from a growth defect when exposed to osmotic stressors and detergents.
These experiments also identified that the ΔsigAB mutant grew significantly better than
wild-type A. baumannii AB5075 when exposed to sub-inhibitory concentrations of
chloramphenicol. It was also established that the ΔsigAB mutant suffered no defect in
biofilm formation. SigAB is present in A. baumannii across growth stages when grown in
rich medium.
Transcriptome analysis at late stationary phase, in which SigAB is most abundant in the
cell, showed that >300 genes the ΔsigAB mutant were differentially expressed compared
to the wild-type AB5075 indicating that it is a global regulator of bacterial gene expression
in A. baumannii. Pathway analysis discovered that ATP-synthase biosynthesis and
histidine catabolism were significantly downregulated in the deletion mutant. The most
down-regulated gene was uncovered to be the uncharacterised small RNA sRNA90 (SabS) and the expression of sRNA90 was independently shown to be dependent on SigAB.
Further work indicated that sRNA90 could play a role in regulating multiple hypothetical
lipoproteins of unknown function, including ABUW_RS18870. In the heterologous E. coli,
it was established that translation of ABUW_RS18870 mRNA was repressed through direct
base-pairing with sRNA90. Taken together, an initial characterisation of the alternative
SigAB factor showed that it is a global regulator of gene expression mediating resistance
to environmental stress and which is directly controlling the expression of sRNA90, which
is suggested to act as a post-transcriptional regulator of lipoproteins in A. baumannii
AB5075.
Author's Homepage:
https://tcdlocalportal.tcd.ie/pls/EnterApex/f?p=800:71:0::::P71_USERNAME:ODRISCE2Description:
APPROVED
Author: O'Driscoll, Eoghan
Advisor:
Kroger, CarstenPublisher:
Trinity College Dublin. School of Genetics & Microbiology. Discipline of MicrobiologyType of material:
ThesisCollections
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Full text availableSubject:
gram negative, A. baumannii, sigma factors, RNA-seqMetadata
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