Staphylococcus aureus ClpX localizes at the division septum and impacts transcription of genes involved in cell division, T7-secretion, and SaPI5-excision

Camilla Jensen, Marie J. Fosberg, Ida Thalsø-Madsen, Kristoffer T. Bæk, Dorte Frees*

*Corresponding author for this work
3 Citations (Scopus)
6 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

In all living cells, molecular chaperones are essential for facilitating folding and unfolding of proteins. ClpX is a highly conserved ATP-dependent chaperone that besides functioning as a classical chaperone can associate with ClpP to form the ClpXP protease. To investigate the relative impact of the ClpXP protease and the ClpX chaperone in cell physiology of the important pathogenic bacterium Staphylococcus aureus, we assessed the transcriptional changes induced by inactivating only ClpXP, or by completely deleting ClpX. This analysis revealed that ClpX has a profound impact on S. aureus cell physiology that is mediated primarily via ClpXP-dependent pathways. As an example, ClpX impacts expression of virulence genes entirely via ClpXP-dependent mechanisms. Furthermore, ClpX controls a high number of genes and sRNAs via pathways involving both ClpXP protease and ClpX chaperone activities; an interesting example being genes promoting excision and replication of the pathogenicity island SaPI5. Independently of ClpP, ClpX, impacts transcription of only a restricted number of genes involved in peptidoglycan synthesis, cell division, and type seven secretion. Finally, we demonstrate that ClpX localizes in single foci in close proximity to the division septum lending support to the idea that ClpX plays a role in S. aureus cell division.

Original languageEnglish
Article number16456
JournalScientific Reports
Volume9
Number of pages11
ISSN2045-2322
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2019

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