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Regulator of Actin-Based Motility (RoaM) Downregulates Actin Tail Formation by Rickettsia Rickettsii and Is Negatively Selected in Mammalian Cell Culture

Overview
Journal mBio
Specialty Microbiology
Date 2022 Mar 14
PMID 35285700
Authors
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Abstract

The etiological agent of Rocky Mountain spotted fever, Rickettsia rickettsii, is an obligately intracellular pathogen that induces the polymerization of actin filaments to propel the bacterium through the cytoplasm and spread to new host cells. Cell-to-cell spread via actin-based motility is considered a key virulence determinant for spotted fever group rickettsiae, as interruption of , the gene directly responsible for actin polymerization, has been shown to reduce fever in guinea pigs. However, little is known about how, or if, motility is regulated by the bacterium itself. We isolated a hyperspreading variant of R. rickettsii Sheila Smith that produces actin tails at an increased rate. ( [egulator f ctin-based otility]) was identified as a negative regulator of actin tail formation. Disruption of RoaM significantly increased the number of actin tails compared to the wild-type strain but did not increase virulence in guinea pigs; however, overexpression of RoaM dramatically decreased the presence of actin tails and moderated fever response. Localization experiments suggest that RoaM is not secreted, while reverse transcription-quantitative PCR (RT-qPCR) data show that various levels of RoaM do not significantly affect the expression of the known rickettsial actin-regulating proteins , , and . Taken together, the data suggest a previously unrecognized level of regulation of actin-based motility in spotted fever group rickettsiae. Although this gene is intact in many isolates of spotted fever, transitional, and ancestral group spp., it is often ablated in highly passaged laboratory strains. Serial passage experiments revealed strong negative selection of in Vero 76 cells. The mechanism of actin-based motility of spotted fever group has been studied extensively, but here, we provide genetic evidence that motility is a regulated process in R. rickettsii. The findings also suggest that serial passage of rickettsial strains in cell culture may cause the bacteria to lose essential genes that are no longer conserved under natural selective pressure. These findings are likely relevant to the interpretation of studies concerning virulence determinants of rickettsiae.

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