1. Characterizing the transport and utilization of the neurotransmitter GABA in the bacterial pathogen Brucella abortus
- Author
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R. Martin Roop, Angela H. Benton, Lin Kang, Joshua E. Pitzer, Clayton C. Caswell, James A. Budnick, Pawel Michalak, and Lauren M. Sheehan
- Subjects
Agrobacteria ,Glutamate decarboxylase ,Brucella abortus ,Plant Science ,Pathology and Laboratory Medicine ,Biochemistry ,White Blood Cells ,Mice ,Plant Microbiology ,Animal Cells ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Pathogen ,gamma-Aminobutyric Acid ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,0303 health sciences ,Mice, Inbred BALB C ,Neurotransmitter Agents ,Multidisciplinary ,Glutamate receptor ,Neurochemistry ,Neurotransmitters ,Animal Models ,Amino acid ,Bacterial Pathogens ,Bioassays and Physiological Analysis ,Experimental Organism Systems ,Medical Microbiology ,Medicine ,Pathogens ,Glutamate ,Cellular Types ,medicine.drug ,Research Article ,Science ,Immune Cells ,Immunology ,Glutamic Acid ,Mouse Models ,Brucella ,Biology ,Research and Analysis Methods ,Microbiology ,Agrobacterium Tumefaciens ,gamma-Aminobutyric acid ,03 medical and health sciences ,Model Organisms ,medicine ,Animals ,Microbial Pathogens ,030304 developmental biology ,Blood Cells ,Bacteria ,030306 microbiology ,Macrophages ,Organisms ,RNA ,Biology and Life Sciences ,Biological Transport ,Metabolism ,Cell Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,chemistry ,nervous system ,Transport Inhibition Assay ,Animal Studies ,Neuroscience - Abstract
The neurotransmitter gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) is the most abundant inhibitory neurotransmitter in the human brain; however, it is becoming more evident that this non-proteinogenic amino acid plays multiple physiological roles in biology. In the present study, the transport and function of GABA is studied in the highly infectious intracellular bacterium Brucella abortus. The data show that 3H-GABA is imported by B. abortus under nutrient limiting conditions and that the small RNAs AbcR1 and AbcR2 negatively regulate this transport. A specific transport system, gts, is responsible for the transport of GABA as determined by measuring 3H-GABA transport in isogenic deletion strains of known AbcR1/2 regulatory targets; however, this locus is unnecessary for Brucella infection in BALB/c mice. Similar assays revealed that 3H-GABA transport is uninhibited by the 20 standard proteinogenic amino acids, representing preference for the transport of 3H-GABA. Metabolic studies did not show any potential metabolic utilization of GABA by B. abortus as a carbon or nitrogen source, and RNA sequencing analysis revealed limited transcriptional differences between B. abortus 2308 with or without exposure to GABA. While this study provides evidence for GABA transport by B. abortus, questions remain as to why and when this transport is utilized during Brucella pathogenesis.
- Published
- 2020