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Helicobacter pylori cheV1 mutants recover semisolid agar migration due to loss of a previously uncharacterized Type IV filament membrane alignment complex homolog.

Abstract

UNLABELLED: The bacterial chemotaxis system is a well-understood signaling pathway that promotes bacterial success. Chemotaxis systems comprise chemoreceptors and the CheA kinase, linked by CheW or CheV scaffold proteins. Scaffold proteins provide connections between chemoreceptors and CheA and also between chemoreceptors to create macromolecular arrays. Chemotaxis is required for host colonization by many microbes, including the stomach pathogen Helicobacter pylori. This bacterium builds chemoreceptor-CheA contacts with two distinct scaffold proteins, CheW and CheV1. H. pylori cheW or cheV1 deletion mutants both lose chemoreceptor array formation, but show differing semisolid agar chemotaxis assay behaviors: ∆cheW mutants exhibit total migration failure, whereas ∆cheV1::cat mutants display a 50% reduction. On investigating these varied responses, we found that both mutants initially struggle with migration. However, over time, ∆cheV1::cat mutants develop a stable, enhanced migration capability, termed migration-able (Mig+). Whole-genome sequencing analysis of four distinct ∆cheV1::cat Mig+ strains identified single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in hpg27_252 (hp0273) that were predicted to truncate the encoded protein. Computational analysis of the hpg27_252-encoded protein revealed it encoded a hypothetical protein that was a remote homolog of the PilO Type IV filament membrane alignment complex protein. Although H. pylori lacks Type IV filaments, our analysis showed it retains an operon of genes for homologs of PilO, PilN, and PilM. Deleting hpg27_252 in the ∆cheV1::cat or wild type strain resulted in enhanced migration in semisolid agar. Our study thus reveals that while cheV1 mutants initially have significant migration defects, they can recover the migration ability through genetic suppressors, highlighting a complex regulatory mechanism in bacterial migration. IMPORTANCE: Chemotactic motility, present in over half of bacteria, depends on chemotaxis signaling systems comprising receptors, kinases, and scaffold proteins. In Helicobacter pylori, a stomach pathogen, chemotaxis is crucial for colonization, with CheV1 and CheW as key scaffold proteins. While both scaffolds are essential for building chemoreceptor complexes, their roles vary in other assays. Our research reexamines cheV1 mutants behavior in semisolid agar, a standard chemotaxis test. Initially, cheV1 mutants exhibited defects similar to those of cheW mutants, but they evolved genetic suppressors that enhanced migration. These suppressors involve mutations in a previously uncharacterized gene, unknown in motility behavior. Our findings highlight the significant chemotaxis defects in cheV1 mutants and identify new elements influencing bacterial motility.

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