The cyl Genes Reveal the Biosynthetic and Evolutionary Origins of the Group B Streptococcus Hemolytic Lipid, Granadaene
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Materia
Group B Streptococcus Bacterial toxin Microbial evolution Virulence factor Gram-positive bacteria
Date
2019Referencia bibliográfica
Armistead B, Whidbey C, Iyer LM, Herrero-Foncubierta P, Quach P, Haidour A, Aravind L, Cuerva JM, Jaspan HB and Rajagopal L (2020) The cyl Genes Reveal the Biosynthetic and Evolutionary Origins of the Group B Streptococcus Hemolytic Lipid, Granadaene. Front. Microbiol. 10:3123.
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This work was supported by funding from the National Institutes of Health grants R01AI112619, R01AI33976, R01AI00989, and R21AI125907 to LR. The NIH training grant T32AI07509 (PI: Lee Ann Campbell) supported CW. LI and LA were supported by intramural funds from NLM, NIH.Résumé
Group B Streptococcus (GBS) is a b-hemolytic, Gram-positive bacterium that commonly
colonizes the female lower genital tract and is associated with fetal injury, preterm
birth, spontaneous abortion, and neonatal infections. A major factor promoting GBS
virulence is the b-hemolysin/cytolysin, which is cytotoxic to several host cells. We
recently showed that the ornithine rhamnolipid pigment, Granadaene, produced by the
gene products of the cyl operon, is hemolytic. Here, we demonstrate that heterologous
expression of the GBS cyl operon conferred hemolysis, pigmentation, and cytoxicity
to Lactococcus lactis, a model non-hemolytic Gram-positive bacterium. Similarly,
pigment purified from L. lactis is hemolytic, cytolytic, and identical in structure to
Granadaene extracted from GBS, indicating the cyl operon is sufficient for Granadaene
production in a heterologous host. Using a systematic survey of phyletic patterns and
contextual associations of the cyl genes, we identify homologs of the cyl operon in
physiologically diverse Gram-positive bacteria and propose undescribed functions of cyl
gene products. Together, these findings bring greater understanding to the biosynthesis
and evolutionary foundations of a key GBS virulence factor and suggest that such
potentially toxic lipids may be encoded by other bacteria.