News Release

Bacterium uses natural 'thermometer' to trigger diarrheal disease, scientists find

Peer-Reviewed Publication

Ohio University

ATHENS, Ohio (May 21, 2013)—How does the bacterium Shigella—the cause of a deadly diarrheal disease—detect that it's in a human host? Ohio University scientists have found that a biological "RNA thermometer" monitors whether the environment is right for the bacterium to produce the factors it needs to survive within the body, according to a study published May 21 in the journal PLOS ONE.

The scientists have been seeking more information about the genetic pathways of Shigella in the hope of finding new treatment options for the disease it causes. Shigellosis kills more than a million people worldwide each year and is becoming more resistant to antibiotics, said Erin Murphy, an assistant professor in Ohio University's Heritage College of Osteopathic Medicine.

The recent study led by Murphy and Andrew Kouse, a doctoral student in molecular and cellular biology, found that when Shigella was in a 37 degree Celsius environment (or at "body temperature"), it efficiently produced the ShuA protein from the corresponding messenger RNA molecule. The bacterium needs the ShuA protein to obtain iron from heme, the most abundant source of this essential nutrient within the human body. Without iron, the invading Shigella would not survive, Murphy explained.

At room temperature, 25 degrees Celsius, production of the ShuA protein from the corresponding messenger RNA was inhibited. The scientists suggest that the structure of the RNA thermometer was blocking genetic expression by preventing protein synthesis.

"This may be an evolutionary adaptation, as it would be wasteful for the bacterium to make this protein before it was in the host," Murphy said.

But once at body temperature, part of the structure of the thermometer "melts away," she said, triggering the bacterium to synthesize the ShuA protein.

The new study marks the first time that researchers have observed a "RNA thermometer" in the Shigella bacterium.

This particular thermometer belongs to a subclass called "FourU RNA thermometers" that was first characterized by study co-author Franz Narberhaus of the Ruhr University Bochum, Germany. These thermometers have been identified in only two other bacteria, Salmonella and Yersinia, both of which can cause serious human illnesses.

"I find it fascinating that an entirely new class of genes has been found to be controlled by an RNA thermometer," Narberhaus said.

Now that the scientists have identified the RNA thermometer in the ShuA gene, they'll look for this structure in the other genes that regulate Shigella's ability to survive in the human host and cause disease.

"The findings could have practical implications for drug design," Murphy said.

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Co-authors on the study are Francesco Righetti, Jens Kortmann and Franz Narberhaus of the Ruhr University Bochum, Germany.

The study was funded by Ohio University's Heritage College of Osteopathic Medicine and the Department of Biomedical Sciences, as well as by the German Research Foundation.

The paper is available online at: http://dx.plos.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0063781.

Contacts: Erin Murphy, (740) 597-3061, murphye@ohio.edu; Director of Research Communications Andrea Gibson, (740) 597-2166, gibsona@ohio.edu.


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