Lyu Zhihui, Wilson Cierra, Weiss Kalyn, Lewis Spencer, Fredrick Kurt, Margolin William, Ling Jiqiang
Department of Cell Biology and Molecular Genetics, The University of Maryland, College Park, Maryland, USA.
Department of Microbiology and Molecular Genetics, McGovern Medical School, The University of Texas Health Science Center, Houston, Texas, USA.
mBio. 2025 Jun 30:e0141725. doi: 10.1128/mbio.01417-25.
The ribosome is the central hub for protein synthesis and is heavily targeted by antibiotics. Ribosomal mutations, antibiotic treatment, and nutrient starvation can alter translational efficiency and lead to stressed cells. Ribosome deficiency plays a critical role in stress responses and disease progression; yet, how it affects bacteria-host interactions remains poorly understood. In this study, we show that a ribosome-deficient strain exhibits a surprising morphological change from rod shape to filamentous in cells growing inside host macrophages. Such filamentation depends on an acidic condition within macrophages and in a defined medium mimicking macrophage conditions. Further genetic analyses revealed that filamentation of the ribosome-deficient strain depends on overexpression of , a gene involved in histidine biosynthesis. Transcription of the histidine biosynthesis operon is regulated by a small leader peptide HisL. Slow translation of HisL in the mutant strain activates transcription of the histidine operon and induces filamentation. In support of this model, we show that ribosome inhibitors also increase the expression of the histidine operon and cause filamentation in wild-type . Bacterial filamentation has been implicated as an adaptive strategy. We show that filamentation improves the survival of cells under acid stress, and filamentous cells resume normal division after the acid stress is removed. Our work thus demonstrates that ribosome deficiency caused by mutations and antibiotics induces filamentation in host cells as a potential survival strategy.
Bacteria growing inside host cells encounter various stresses and have evolved multiple adaptive mechanisms. One such mechanism is morphological changes, such as from rod-shaped cells to filaments. is a rod-shaped pathogen that infects over 100 million people each year as well as numerous farmed animals. In this work, we present new findings that slowing down protein synthesis causes to filament inside mammalian host cells. Combining genetic, molecular, and cell biology approaches, we demonstrate that filamentation of Salmonella cells is caused by translational and transcriptional regulation of the histidine operon. Filamentous cells appear to tolerate acid stress better and resume cell division after the stress is removed. This work highlights intriguing translational control of bacterial cell division and morphology, which may facilitate cells to adapt to the host environment.
核糖体是蛋白质合成的中心枢纽,也是抗生素的主要作用靶点。核糖体突变、抗生素治疗和营养饥饿会改变翻译效率并导致细胞应激。核糖体缺陷在应激反应和疾病进展中起关键作用;然而,其如何影响细菌与宿主的相互作用仍知之甚少。在本研究中,我们发现核糖体缺陷菌株在宿主巨噬细胞内生长的细胞中呈现出从杆状到丝状的惊人形态变化。这种丝状体形成取决于巨噬细胞内以及模拟巨噬细胞条件的特定培养基中的酸性条件。进一步的基因分析表明,核糖体缺陷菌株的丝状体形成取决于参与组氨酸生物合成的基因的过表达。组氨酸生物合成操纵子的转录受一个小的前导肽HisL调控。HisL在突变菌株中的缓慢翻译激活了组氨酸操纵子的转录并诱导丝状体形成。为支持这一模型,我们表明核糖体抑制剂也会增加组氨酸操纵子的表达并在野生型中导致丝状体形成。细菌丝状体形成被认为是一种适应性策略。我们表明丝状体形成提高了细胞在酸应激下的存活率,并且在酸应激消除后丝状细胞恢复正常分裂。因此,我们的工作证明由突变和抗生素引起的核糖体缺陷会诱导宿主细胞中的丝状化,这是一种潜在的生存策略。
在宿主细胞内生长的细菌会遇到各种应激,并进化出多种适应性机制。其中一种机制是形态变化,例如从杆状细胞变为丝状。是一种杆状病原体,每年感染超过1亿人以及众多养殖动物。在这项工作中,我们提出了新的发现,即蛋白质合成减慢会导致在哺乳动物宿主细胞内形成丝状体。结合遗传、分子和细胞生物学方法,我们证明细胞的丝状体形成是由组氨酸操纵子的翻译和转录调控引起的。丝状细胞似乎对酸应激具有更好的耐受性,并在应激消除后恢复细胞分裂。这项工作突出了细菌细胞分裂和形态的有趣翻译控制,这可能有助于细胞适应宿主环境。