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Institute
Bacterial small RNAs are key mediators of post-transcriptional gene regulation. An increasing number of sRNAs have been implicated in the regulation of virulence programs of pathogenic bacteria. Recently, in the enteric pathogen Salmonella Typhimurium, the PinT sRNA has gained increased importance as it is the most upregulated sRNA as Salmonella infects mammalian host cells (Westermann et al., 2016). PinT acts as a temporal regulator of Salmonella‘s two major pathogenicity islands, SPI-1 and SPI-2 (Kim et al., 2019; Westermann et al., 2016). However, the complete set of PinT targets, its role in Salmonella infection and host response is not yet fully understood. Building on the MS2 affinity purification and RNA- seq (MAPS) method (Lalaouna et al., 2015), we here set out to globally identify direct RNA ligands of PinT, relevant to Salmonella infection. We transferred the classical MAPS technique, based on sRNA-bait overexpression, to more physiological conditions, using endogenous levels of the sRNA. Making the henceforth identified targets, less likely to represent artefacts of the overexpression. More importantly, we progressed the MAPS technique to in vivo settings and by doing so, we were able pull-down bacterial RNA transcripts bound by PinT during macrophage infection. While we validate previously known PinT targets, our integrated data revealed novel virulence relevant target. These included mRNAs for the SPI-2 effector SteC, the PhoQ activator UgtL and the 30S ribosomal protein S22 RpsV. Next, we follow up on SteC, the best characterized virulence relevant PinT target. Using genetic and biochemical assays, we demonstrate that PinT represses steC mRNA by direct base-pairing and translational interference. PinT-mediated regulation of SteC leads to alterations in the host response to Salmonella infection. This regulation impacts the cytokine response of infected macrophages, by altering IL10 production, and possibly driving the macrophages to an anti-inflammatory state, more permise to infection. SteC is responsible for F-actin meshwork rearrangements around the SCV (Poh et al., 2008). Here we demonstrate that PinT-mediated regulation of SteC, impacts the formation of this actin meshwork in infected cells. Our results demonstrate that SteC expression is very tightly regulated by PinT in two layers; indirectly, by repressing ssrB and crp; and directly by binding to steC 5’UTR. PinT contributes to post-transcriptional cross-talk between invasion and intracellular replication programs of Salmonella, by controlling the expression of both SPI-1 and SPI-2 genes (directly and indirectly). Together, our collective data makes PinT the first sRNA in Gram-negatives with a pervasive role in virulence, at the center of Salmonella virulence programs and provide molecular input that could help explain the attenuation of pinT-deficient Salmonella strains in whole animal models of infection.
Small proteins, often defined as shorter than 50 amino acids, have been implicated
in fundamental cellular processes. Despite this, they have been largely understudied throughout all domains of life, since their size often makes their identification and characterization challenging.
This work addressed the knowledge gap surrounding small proteins with a focus
on the model bacterial pathogen Salmonella Typhimurium. In a first step,
new small proteins were identified with a combination of computational and experimental approaches. Infection-relevant datasets were then investigated with
the updated Salmonella annotation to prioritize promising candidates involved in virulence.
To implement the annotation of new small proteins, predictions from the algorithm
sPepFinder were merged with those derived from Ribo-seq. These were added to the Salmonella annotation and used to (re)analyse different datasets. Information
regarding expression during infection (dual RNA-seq) and requirement for virulence (TraDIS) was collected for each given coding sequence. In parallel,
Grad-seq data were mined to identify small proteins engaged in intermolecular
interactions.
The combination of dual RNA-seq and TraDIS lead to the identification of small
proteins with features of virulence factors, namely high intracellular induction
and a virulence phenotype upon transposon insertion. As a proof of principle of
the power of this approach in highlighting high confidence candidates, two small
proteins were characterized in the context of Salmonella infection.
MgrB, a known regulator of the PhoPQ two-component system, was shown to be essential for the infection of epithelial cells and macrophages, possibly via its stabilizing effect on flagella or by interacting with other sensor kinases of twocomponent
systems. YjiS, so far uncharacterized in Salmonella, had an opposite role in infection, with its deletion rendering Salmonella hypervirulent. The mechanism underlying this, though still obscure, likely relies on the interaction with
inner-membrane proteins.
Overall, this work provides a global description of Salmonella small proteins in
the context of infection with a combinatorial approach that expedites the identification
of interesting candidates. Different high-throughput datasets available for
a broad range of organisms can be analysed in a similar manner with a focus on small proteins. This will lead to the identification of key factors in the regulation
of various processes, thus for example providing targets for the treatment of bacterial
infections or, in the case of commensal bacteria, for the modulation of the microbiota composition.