The C. difficile clnRAB operon initiates adaptations to the host environment in response to LL-37.
Woods. Emily C EC; Edwards. Adrianne N AN; Childress. Kevin O KO; Jones. Joshua B JB; McBride. Shonna M SM
Key Findings
- C. difficile strongly activates the clnRAB operon when exposed to LL-37.
- The ClnR protein binds directly to LL-37 and regulates many other genes related to metabolism and virulence.
- The clnRAB system appears to act as a sensor that lets the bacteria adjust to the host environment during infection.
Practical Outcomes
- For self‑directed health optimizers, this research offers no actionable steps or dosage advice for LL-37. It mainly advances basic understanding of how a harmful gut microbe evades the immune system, which is more relevant to microbiology and drug development than to personal health protocols.
Summary
The study shows that the gut bacterium C. difficile can detect the human antimicrobial peptide LL-37 and uses a special gene system (clnRAB) to change its behavior and survive in the intestine. This mechanism helps the bacteria adapt during infection but does not provide any direct guidance for using LL-37 as a supplement or therapy.
Abstract
To cause disease, Clostridioides (Clostridium) difficile must resist killing by innate immune effectors in the intestine, including the host antimicrobial peptide, cathelicidin (LL-37). The mechanisms that enable C. difficile to adapt to the intestine in the presence of antimicrobial peptides are unknown. Expression analyses revealed an operon, CD630_16170-CD630_16190 (clnRAB), which is highly induced by LL-37 and is not expressed in response to other cell-surface active antimicrobials. This operon encodes a predicted transcriptional regulator (ClnR) and an ABC transporter system (ClnAB), all of which are required for function. Analyses of a clnR mutant indicate that ClnR is a pleiotropic regulator that directly binds to LL-37 and controls expression of numerous genes, including many involved in metabolism, cellular transport, signaling, gene regulation, and pathogenesis. The data suggest that ClnRAB is a novel regulatory mechanism that senses LL-37 as a host signal and regulates gene expression to adapt to the host intestinal environment during infection.
Study Information
pubmed
2018
2018-08-20T00:00:00.000Z
10.1371/journal.ppat.1007153