perfringens but proteins sharing similarities with glutaredoxin-reductases are lacking. The possible CYT387 cost involvement
of glutathione or other cysteine derivatives as a low-molecular-weight antioxidant in C. perfringens remains to be determined. Conclusion Most of genes involved in sulfur metabolism in C. perfringens are controlled in response to sulfur availability by premature termination of transcription. An S-box motif is located upstream of the metK gene encoding a SAM synthase and the metT gene encoding a probable methionine transporter. Two pathways leading to cysteine production from methionine (LuxS, MccA, MccB) or sulfide (CysKE) and two cyst(e)ine transporters are controlled by a T-boxcys regulatory element. By different approaches, we have demonstrated that the 4 cysteine specific T-boxes of C. perfringens respond to cysteine availability and that the T-box upstream INCB28060 solubility dmso of cysP2 promotes premature termination of transcription in the presence of cysteine. Interestingly, T-boxes are present upstream of the ubiG and cysKE operons and the cysP2 gene of C. botulinum [42] as well as the cysKE and ubiG operons of C. kluyveri suggesting conserved mechanisms for the control of cysteine metabolism in these clostridia. By contrast, no T-box is present upstream of cysK of C. acetobutylicum, C. tetani and C. novyi or cysP2 of C. tetani and C. novyi suggesting that other mechanisms of control of cysteine
metabolism may exist in clostridia. In other firmicutes, cysteine specific T-boxes are mainly found upstream Semaxanib chemical structure of cysS encoding the cysteinyl-tRNA synthetase or cysES while cysteine metabolism is controlled
by CymR-type regulators in Bacillales and by CysR in Streptococci [16]. In C. perfringens, the expression of the ubiG operon involved in methionine to cysteine conversion and in AI-2 production is submitted to a complex regulatory network with a triple control: i) a drastic induction during cysteine starvation via the cysteine specific T-box system present upstream of ubiG that senses the level of charge of tRNAcys [11]; ii) a control by the VirS/VirR two-component system via the VR-RNA by a still uncharacterized Selleck Cobimetinib mechanism and iii) a regulation by VirX, a regulatory RNA, which controls toxin production independently from VirR. The control of ubiG expression by global virulence regulators like VirR and VirX suggests a role of this operon during infection. Its control by VirR and VirX might allow i) maintaining the pool of methionine, an amino-acid that cannot be synthesized by human cells and/or ii) limiting the pool of cysteine, an amino-acid that promotes oxidative DNA damages by driving the Fenton reaction due to the efficient reduction of Fe3+ by cysteine [63]. This may contribute to increased resistance to reactive oxygen species during infection. Finally, several genes are up-regulated during cysteine depletion via mechanisms different from the T-box and S-box systems in C. perfringens.