학술논문

Genetic diversity of Legionella pcs and pmtA genes and the effect of utilization of choline by Legionella spp. on induction of proinflammatory cytokines
RESEARCH ARTICLE
Document Type
Report
Source
Pathogens and Disease. October 15, 2019, Vol. 77 Issue 7, p1d, 13 p.
Subject
Poland
Language
English
Abstract
INTRODUCTION Members of the family Legionellaceae are aerobic Gram-negative rods, which occur ubiquitously in natural aquatic environments and engineeredwater systems as intracellular pathogens of protozoa, especially free-living amoeba. Man-made technologies [...]
Legionella species synthesize phosphatidylcholine (PC) in two independent pathways: the three-step methylation of phosphatidylethanolamine PMT pathway and the one-step PCS pathway, in which the Pcs enzyme catalyzes the reaction between choline and CDP-diacylglycerol to form PC. Legionella pcs genes encode highly hydrophobic proteins with phosphatidylcholine synthase activity, which contain up to eight transmembrane helices with N- and C-termini located inside the bacterial cell. The comparative analysis of nucleotide sequences of pcs showed that these genes share high sequence identity among members of the Legionellaceae family. Legionella pmtA genes involved in the PMT pathway encoded small cytosolic proteins with putative phosphatidylethanolamine N-methyltransferase activity. The pmtA genes identified in Legionella species had lower sequence identity to each other than the pcs genes. The phylogenetic tree constructed based on the pcs and pmtA gene sequences showed phylogenetic relatedness between Legionella spp. and other bacteria. The utilization of extracellular choline by the four Legionella species leads to changes not only in the lipid components but also in proteins, and the interactions between these components lead to changes in cell surface properties, which result in a decline in induction of proinflammatory cytokines (TNF-[alpha] and IL-6). Keywords: cytokines; phosphatidylcholine; phospholipids