Wyckoff EE, Mey AR, Payne SM. Iron acquisition in
Vibrio cholerae.
Biometals. 2007 Jun;20(3-4):405-16.
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Vibrio cholerae, the causative agent of cholera, has an absolute
requirement for iron and must obtain this element in the human host as well
as in its varied environmental niches. It has multiple systems for iron
acquisition, including the TonB-dependent transport of heme, the endogenous
siderophore vibriobactin and several siderophores that are produced by other
microorganisms. There is also a Feo system for the transport of ferrous iron
and an ABC transporter, Fbp, which transports ferric iron. There appears to
be at least one additional high affinity iron transport system that has not
yet been identified. In iron replete conditions, iron acquisition genes are
repressed by Fur. Fur also represses the synthesis of a small, regulatory
RNA, RyhB, which negatively regulates genes for iron-containing proteins
involved in the tricarboxylic acid cycle and respiration as well as genes
for motility and chemotaxis. The redundancy in iron transport systems has
made it more difficult to determine the role of individual systems in vivo
and in vitro, but it may reflect the overall importance of iron in the
growth and survival of V. cholerae. |
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