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1.
Inhalation of Yersinia pestis causes primary pneumonic plague, a highly lethal syndrome with mortality rates approaching 100%. Pneumonic plague progression is biphasic, with an initial pre-inflammatory phase facilitating bacterial growth in the absence of host inflammation, followed by a pro-inflammatory phase marked by extensive neutrophil influx, an inflammatory cytokine storm, and severe tissue destruction. Using a FRET-based probe to quantitate injection of effector proteins by the Y. pestis type III secretion system, we show that these bacteria target alveolar macrophages early during infection of mice, followed by a switch in host cell preference to neutrophils. We also demonstrate that neutrophil influx is unable to limit bacterial growth in the lung and is ultimately responsible for the severe inflammation during the lethal pro-inflammatory phase.  相似文献   

2.

Background

Yersinia pestis causes severe disease in natural rodent hosts, but mild to inapparent disease in certain rodent predators such as dogs. Y. pestis initiates infection in susceptible hosts by parasitizing and multiplying intracellularly in local macrophages prior to systemic dissemination. Thus, we hypothesize that Y. pestis disease severity may depend on the degree to which intracellular Y. pestis overcomes the initial host macrophage imposed stress.

Methodology/Principal Findings

To test this hypothesis, the progression of in vitro infection by Y. pestis KIM62053.1+ of mouse splenic and RAW264.7 tissue culture macrophages and dog peripheral blood-derived and DH82 tissue culture macrophages was studied using microscopy and various parameters of infection. The study showed that during the early stage of infection, intracellular Y. pestis assumed filamentous cellular morphology with multiple copies of the genome per bacterium in both mouse and dog macrophages. Later, in mouse macrophages, the infection elicited spacious vacuolar extension of Yersinia containing vacuoles (YCV), and the filamentous Y. pestis reverted to coccobacillary morphology with genomic equivalents approximately equaling colony forming units. In contrast, Y. pestis infected dog macrophages did not show noticeable extension of YCV, and intracellular Y. pestis retained the filamentous cellular morphology for the entire experiment in DH82 cells or were killed by blood-derived macrophages. In addition, during the later stage of infection, Y. pestis infected mouse macrophages exhibited cell lysis whereas dog macrophages did not.

Conclusion/Significance

Overall, these results support our hypothesis that Y. pestis in mouse macrophages can overcome the initial intracellular stress necessary for subsequent systemic infection. However, in dogs, failure of Y. pestis to overcome macrophage imposed stress may result in mild or in apparent disease in dogs.  相似文献   

3.
An important virulence strategy evolved by bacterial pathogens to overcome host defenses is the modulation of host cell death. Previous observations have indicated that Yersinia pestis, the causative agent of plague disease, exhibits restricted capacity to induce cell death in macrophages due to ineffective translocation of the type III secretion effector YopJ, as opposed to the readily translocated YopP, the YopJ homologue of the enteropathogen Yersinia enterocolitica O∶8. This led us to suggest that reduced cytotoxic potency may allow pathogen propagation within a shielded niche, leading to increased virulence. To test the relationship between cytotoxic potential and virulence, we replaced Y. pestis YopJ with YopP. The YopP-expressing Y. pestis strain exhibited high cytotoxic activity against macrophages in vitro. Following subcutaneous infection, this strain had reduced ability to colonize internal organs, was unable to induce septicemia and exhibited at least a 107-fold reduction in virulence. Yet, upon intravenous or intranasal infection, it was still as virulent as the wild-type strain. The subcutaneous administration of the cytotoxic Y. pestis strain appears to activate a rapid and potent systemic, CTL-independent, immunoprotective response, allowing the organism to overcome simultaneous coinfection with 10,000 LD50 of virulent Y. pestis. Moreover, three days after subcutaneous administration of this strain, animals were also protected against septicemic or primary pneumonic plague. Our findings indicate that an inverse relationship exists between the cytotoxic potential of Y. pestis and its virulence following subcutaneous infection. This appears to be associated with the ability of the engineered cytotoxic Y. pestis strain to induce very rapid, effective and long-lasting protection against bubonic and pneumonic plague. These observations have novel implications for the development of vaccines/therapies against Y. pestis and shed new light on the virulence strategies of Y. pestis in nature.  相似文献   

4.
5.
Background Yersinia pestis is the causative agent of human plague and is endemic in various African, Asian and American countries. In Madagascar, the disease represents a significant public health problem with hundreds of human cases a year. Unfortunately, poor infrastructure makes outbreak investigations challenging.Conclusions/SignificancePlague in Madagascar is caused by numerous distinct types of Y. pestis. Genotyping method choice should be based upon the discriminatory power needed, expense, and available data for any desired comparisons. We conclude that genotyping should be a standard tool used in epidemiological investigations of plague outbreaks.  相似文献   

6.
7.
8.

Background

Yersinia pestis initiates infection by parasitism of host macrophages. In response to macrophage infections, intracellular Y. pestis can assume a filamentous cellular morphology which may mediate resistance to host cell innate immune responses. We previously observed the expression of Y. pestis tellurite resistance proteins TerD and TerE from the terZABCDE operon during macrophage infections. Others have observed a filamentous response associated with expression of tellurite resistance operon in Escherichia coli exposed to tellurite. Therefore, in this study we examine the potential role of Y. pestis tellurite resistance operon in filamentous cellular morphology during macrophage infections.

Principal Findings

In vitro treatment of Y. pestis culture with sodium tellurite (Na2TeO3) caused the bacterial cells to assume a filamentous phenotype similar to the filamentous phenotype observed during macrophage infections. A deletion mutant for genes terZAB abolished the filamentous morphologic response to tellurite exposure or intracellular parasitism, but without affecting tellurite resistance. However, a terZABCDE deletion mutant abolished both filamentous morphologic response and tellurite resistance. Complementation of the terZABCDE deletion mutant with terCDE, but not terZAB, partially restored tellurite resistance. When the terZABCDE deletion mutant was complemented with terZAB or terCDE, Y. pestis exhibited filamentous morphology during macrophage infections as well as while these complemented genes were being expressed under an in vitro condition. Further in E. coli, expression of Y. pestis terZAB, but not terCDE, conferred a filamentous phenotype.

Conclusions

These findings support the role of Y. pestis terZAB mediation of the filamentous response phenotype; whereas, terCDE confers tellurite resistance. Although the beneficial role of filamentous morphological responses by Y. pestis during macrophage infections is yet to be fully defined, it may be a bacterial adaptive strategy to macrophage associated stresses.  相似文献   

9.
The paper-strip blood-sampling technique was evaluated for efficacy in plague passive hemagglutination tests. It is valuable for widespread serological surveys.  相似文献   

10.

Background

Yersinia pestis, the agent of plague, has caused many millions of human deaths and still poses a serious threat to global public health. Timely and reliable detection of such a dangerous pathogen is of critical importance. Lysis by specific bacteriophages remains an essential method of Y. pestis detection and plague diagnostics.

Methodology/Principal Findings

The objective of this work was to develop an alternative to conventional phage lysis tests – a rapid and highly sensitive method of indirect detection of live Y. pestis cells based on quantitative real-time PCR (qPCR) monitoring of amplification of reporter Y. pestis-specific bacteriophages. Plague diagnostic phages ϕA1122 and L-413C were shown to be highly effective diagnostic tools for the detection and identification of Y. pestis by using qPCR with primers specific for phage DNA. The template DNA extraction step that usually precedes qPCR was omitted. ϕA1122-specific qPCR enabled the detection of an initial bacterial concentration of 103 CFU/ml (equivalent to as few as one Y. pestis cell per 1-µl sample) in four hours. L-413C-mediated detection of Y. pestis was less sensitive (up to 100 bacteria per sample) but more specific, and thus we propose parallel qPCR for the two phages as a rapid and reliable method of Y. pestis identification. Importantly, ϕA1122 propagated in simulated clinical blood specimens containing EDTA and its titer rise was detected by both a standard plating test and qPCR.

Conclusions/Significance

Thus, we developed a novel assay for detection and identification of Y. pestis using amplification of specific phages monitored by qPCR. The method is simple, rapid, highly sensitive, and specific and allows the detection of only live bacteria.  相似文献   

11.
Despite the importance of pneumonic plague, little is known of the early pulmonary immune responses that occur following inhalation of Yersinia pestis. Therefore, we conducted studies to identify the early target cells for uptake of Y. pestis in the lungs following intratracheal or i.v. inoculation. Following intratracheal inoculation, Y. pestis was rapidly internalized primarily by a distinctive population of CD11c+DEC-205+CD11b- cells in the airways, whereas i.v. inoculation resulted in uptake primarily by CD11b+CD11c- macrophages and granulocytes in lung tissues. The airway cells internalized and were infected by Y. pestis, but did not support active replication of the organism. Intratracheal inoculation of Y. pestis resulted in rapid activation of airway CD11c+ cells, followed within 24 h by the selective disappearance of these cells from the airways and lungs and the accumulation of apoptotic CD11c+ cells in draining lymph nodes. When CD11c+ cells in the airways were depleted using liposomal clodronate before infection, this resulted in a significantly increased replication of Y. pestis in the lungs and dissemination to the spleen and draining lymph nodes. These findings suggest that CD11c+ cells in the airways play an important role in suppressing the initial replication and dissemination of inhaled Y. pestis, although these results will also require confirmation using fully virulent strains of Y. pestis. Depletion of these airway cells by Y. pestis may therefore be one strategy the organism uses to overcome pulmonary defenses following inhalation of the organism.  相似文献   

12.
To gain insights into the evolutionary origin, emergence, and pathogenicity of the etiologic agent of plague, we have sequenced the genomes of four Yersinia pestis strains isolated from the zoonotic rodent reservoir in foci of endemic plague in China. These resources enable in-depth studies of Y. pestis sequence variations and detailed whole-genome comparisons of very closely related genomes from the supposed site of the origin and the emergence of global pandemics of plague.Here we report on the genomes of Yersinia pestis strains B42003004, K1973002, E1979001, and F1991016, which represent a sample of the genetic diversity found in four foci of endemic plague in China (24). Y. pestis bv. orientalis strain F1991016 was isolated in 1991 from Cangyuan County, China, from a rat (Rattus flavipectus), and Y. pestis bv. antiqua strain E1979001 was isolated in 1979 from Jianchuan, China, from a vole (Eothenomys miletus). Both Y. pestis strains K1973002 and B42003004 of biovars medievalis and antiqua, respectively, originate from marmota species (Marmota himalayana Hetian 1973; Marmota baibacina Wenquan 2003) (24). Genome analyses of these key isolates outline the details of microevolution of the plague bacterium, as these isolates represent important evolutionary milestones of the species, which is thought to have originated in Central Asia as a clonal descendant of Yersinia pseudotuberculosis (1). Genomic DNA was subjected to whole-genome shotgun sequencing and closure strategies as previously described (15). Plasmid (pHOS2) and fosmid (pCC1fos) libraries were constructed, with insert sizes of 4 to 6 kb and 30 to 40 kb, respectively. An average of 67,000 high-quality Sanger reads (total, 268,160) was obtained with an 860-bp average read length. The genomes with an average 12-fold read coverage depth were assembled using a Celera Assembler (11) and manually annotated using Manatee (http://manatee.sourceforge.net/). Genomic architectures were compared using Mauve (5, 18), and proteomes were analyzed with the BLAST score ratio tool (17).The young evolutionary history of the species and resulting homogenous population structure is reflected in a high degree of proteome conservation between the sequenced isolates and the modern strain CO92 (16). Y. pestis pathogenicity is anchored in its mobile inventory, and typically, isolates harbor three virulence plasmids, the species-specific plasminogen activator and murine toxin plasmids and the low-calcium-response plasmid pCD (23). Their pCD-borne lcrV antigen shows a genetic makeup identical to that of CO92 (2, 16). The insertion sequence element expansion clearly distinguishes these Central Asian isolates from the progenitor Y. pseudotuberculosis (3, 8). Comprehensive analyses reveal a lack of genome-wide synteny and suggest massive intrachromosomal rearrangements, a characteristic feature of Y. pestis genome evolution (6, 8). Besides insertion sequence element abundance, we observed isolate-specific propagation patterns that not only shaped the reorganization of the genomic architecture but also are known to drive microevolutionary adaptation in Y. pestis (4, 9, 14, 21, 24). Based upon the phenotypic and genotypic features that differentiate these isolates (13, 20, 24), B42003004 belongs to the most ancient Y. pestis lineage known to exist in China; hence, it is phylogenetically thought to be closest to the species progenitor Y. pseudotuberculosis (22). We studied metabolic genes that determine their biovar classification and investigated the underlying genetic determinants (24). Isolate K1973002 is defective in the nitrate reductase napA gene, similar to strain KIM (7), and represents the results of the evolutionary processes implicated in the biovar conversion from antiqua to medievalis. Isolate F1991016 carries an in-frame deletion in the glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase glpD gene (19), similar to strain CO92 (16), and characteristic of the antiqua-to-orientalis conversion. The observed genetic traits strengthen the hypothesis that biovars medievalis and orientalis arose through parallel evolution from a glycerol- and nitrate-positive antiqua progenitor due to the acquisition of independent mutations (1, 10, 14). Variable-number tandem-nucleotide-repeat alleles (12) (allele K, K1973002; allele K, B42003004; allele P, E1979001; allele G, F1991016) are not biovar specific and are not discriminative enough to differentiate these isolates, which clearly supports a population-based phylogeny, as introduced by Achtman et al. (1).The whole-genome draft sequences of these evolutionary key isolates of Y. pestis will facilitate additional bioinformatic and phylogenetic analyses. The availability of high-quality Sanger sequences is crucial to resolve the genetically homogenous population structure and to shed light on Y. pestis speciation. Understanding the plasticity and genome dynamics further aids in forensic and epidemiological analyses by setting up the basis for an accurate and robust typing system for plague surveillance and promotes diagnostics development and control measures.  相似文献   

13.
PCR快速鉴定鼠疫耶尔森氏菌   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
建立一种简便、快速、特异的PCR检测方法,用于鼠疫耶尔森氏菌的快速鉴定。针对鼠疫耶尔森氏菌特异的一段染色体序列3a设计引物,扩增-276bp片段的鼠疫标识序列。应用该PCR反应体系,对我国17个生态型及1个待定的生态型共计275株鼠疫耶尔森氏菌及48株相关菌株的PCR扩增结果表明,实验菌株均扩增出预期的276bp片段产物带,48株相关菌株均阴性,其检测灵敏度为100pg DNA。说明该方法用于鼠疫耶尔森氏菌的检测鉴定简便、快捷,具有很高的特异性和敏感性。  相似文献   

14.
A new hypothesis of the origin of the plague microbe in the Mongolian bobak (Marmota sibirica Radde, 1862) populations in Central Asia during the Pleistocene is based on the ideas of its relative phylogenetic recency. The Late Pleistocene cooling, which induced a deep freezing of the grounds in southern Siberia, Mongolia, and Manchuria, is considered as an inducer of speciation. The main ecological factors of the plague microbe evolution include the species specific behavior of the Mongolian bobak as it prepared to hibernate related to its occurrence in arid petrophytic landscapes and the larval parasitism of the flea Oropsylla silantiewi Wagn., 1898 in winter. Genesis of the plague foci is divided into two periods: natural-historical and biosocial. During the first period, the primary natural foci in Eurasia were formed and, during the second period, synanthropic (rat) and secondary natural foci appeared with the participation of humans in Africa, The New World, and on some tropical islands.  相似文献   

15.

Background

Plague is a life-threatening disease caused by the bacterium, Yersinia pestis. Since the 1990s, Africa has accounted for the majority of reported human cases. In Uganda, plague cases occur in the West Nile region, near the border with Democratic Republic of Congo. Despite the ongoing risk of contracting plague in this region, little is known about Y. pestis genotypes causing human disease.

Methodology/Principal Findings

During January 2004–December 2012, 1,092 suspect human plague cases were recorded in the West Nile region of Uganda. Sixty-one cases were culture-confirmed. Recovered Y. pestis isolates were analyzed using three typing methods, single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), pulsed field gel electrophoresis (PFGE), and multiple variable number of tandem repeat analysis (MLVA) and subpopulations analyzed in the context of associated geographic, temporal, and clinical data for source patients. All three methods separated the 61 isolates into two distinct 1.ANT lineages, which persisted throughout the 9 year period and were associated with differences in elevation and geographic distribution.

Conclusions/Significance

We demonstrate that human cases of plague in the West Nile region of Uganda are caused by two distinct 1.ANT genetic subpopulations. Notably, all three typing methods used, SNPs, PFGE, and MLVA, identified the two genetic subpopulations, despite recognizing different mutation types in the Y. pestis genome. The geographic and elevation differences between the two subpopulations is suggestive of their maintenance in highly localized enzootic cycles, potentially with differing vector-host community composition. This improved understanding of Y. pestis subpopulations in the West Nile region will be useful for identifying ecologic and environmental factors associated with elevated plague risk.  相似文献   

16.

Background

The species Yersinia pestis is commonly divided into three classical biovars, Antiqua, Medievalis, and Orientalis, belonging to subspecies pestis pathogenic for human and the (atypical) non-human pathogenic biovar Microtus (alias Pestoides) including several non-pestis subspecies. Recent progress in molecular typing methods enables large-scale investigations in the population structure of this species. It is now possible to test hypotheses about its evolution which were proposed decades ago. For instance the three classical biovars of different geographical distributions were suggested to originate from Central Asia. Most investigations so far have focused on the typical pestis subspecies representatives found outside of China, whereas the understanding of the emergence of this human pathogen requires the investigation of strains belonging to subspecies pestis from China and to the Microtus biovar.

Methodology/Principal Findings

Multi-locus VNTR analysis (MLVA) with 25 loci was performed on a collection of Y. pestis isolates originating from the majority of the known foci worldwide and including typical rhamnose-negative subspecies pestis as well as rhamnose-positive subspecies pestis and biovar Microtus. More than 500 isolates from China, the Former Soviet Union (FSU), Mongolia and a number of other foci around the world were characterized and resolved into 350 different genotypes. The data revealed very close relationships existing between some isolates from widely separated foci as well as very high diversity which can conversely be observed between nearby foci.

Conclusions/Significance

The results obtained are in full agreement with the view that the Y. pestis subsp. pestis pathogenic for humans emerged in the Central Asia region between China, Kazakhstan, Russia and Mongolia, only three clones of which spread out of Central Asia. The relationships among the strains in China, Central Asia and the rest of the world based on the MLVA25 assay provide an unprecedented view on the expansion and microevolution of Y. pestis.  相似文献   

17.
Bacterial proteins destined for the Tat pathway are folded before crossing the inner membrane and are typically identified by an N-terminal signal peptide containing a twin arginine motif. Translocation by the Tat pathway is dependent on the products of genes which encode proteins possessing the binding site of the signal peptide and mediating the actual translocation event. In the fully virulent CO92 strain of Yersinia pestis, the tatA gene was deleted. The mutant was assayed for loss of virulence through various in vitro and in vivo assays. Deletion of the tatA gene resulted in several consequences for the mutant as compared to wild-type. Cell morphology of the mutant bacteria was altered and demonstrated a more elongated form. In addition, while cultures of the mutant strain were able to produce a biofilm, we observed a loss of adhesion of the mutant biofilm structure compared to the biofilm produced by the wild-type strain. Immuno-electron microscopy revealed a partial disruption of the F1 antigen on the surface of the mutant. The virulence of the ΔtatA mutant was assessed in various murine models of plague. The mutant was severely attenuated in the bubonic model with full virulence restored by complementation with the native gene. After small-particle aerosol challenge in a pneumonic model of infection, the mutant was also shown to be attenuated. In contrast, when mice were challenged intranasally with the mutant, very little difference in the LD50 was observed between wild-type and mutant strains. However, an increased time-to-death and delay in bacterial dissemination was observed in mice infected with the ΔtatA mutant as compared to the parent strain. Collectively, these findings demonstrate an essential role for the Tat pathway in the virulence of Y. pestis in bubonic and small-aerosol pneumonic infection but less important role for intranasal challenge.  相似文献   

18.
Applied Biochemistry and Microbiology - The paper reports the assessment of the role of surface antigens in Yersinia pestis adhesion to murine macrophages J774. The ability of Ail and Psa antigens...  相似文献   

19.
Pathogens and associated outbreaks of infectious disease exert selective pressure on human populations, and any changes in allele frequencies that result may be especially evident for genes involved in immunity. In this regard, the 1346-1353 Yersinia pestis-caused Black Death pandemic, with continued plague outbreaks spanning several hundred years, is one of the most devastating recorded in human history. To investigate the potential impact of Y. pestis on human immunity genes, we extracted DNA from 36 plague victims buried in a mass grave in Ellwangen, Germany in the 16th century. We targeted 488 immune-related genes, including HLA, using a novel in-solution hybridization capture approach. In comparison with 50 modern native inhabitants of Ellwangen, we find differences in allele frequencies for variants of the innate immunity proteins Ficolin-2 and NLRP14 at sites involved in determining specificity. We also observed that HLA-DRB1*13 is more than twice as frequent in the modern population, whereas HLA-B alleles encoding an isoleucine at position 80 (I-80+), HLA C*06:02 and HLA-DPB1 alleles encoding histidine at position 9 are half as frequent in the modern population. Simulations show that natural selection has likely driven these allele frequency changes. Thus, our data suggest that allele frequencies of HLA genes involved in innate and adaptive immunity responsible for extracellular and intracellular responses to pathogenic bacteria, such as Y. pestis, could have been affected by the historical epidemics that occurred in Europe.  相似文献   

20.
Transport of Ca2+ by Yersinia pestis.   总被引:4,自引:2,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
Low-calcium-response, or Lcr, plasmids of yersiniae are known to promote an in vitro nutritional requirement for 2.5 mM Ca2+ at 37 degrees C which, if not fulfilled, results in cessation of growth with induction of virulence functions (Lcr+). The mechanism whereby Ca2+ regulates this metabolic shift is unknown. Radioactive Ca2+ was not actively accumulated by yersiniae but was excluded by an exit reaction analogous to those described for other bacteria. Nevertheless, cultivation at 37 degrees C with 0.1 mM Ca2+, a level insufficient to prevent restriction of cell division, promoted significantly more binding of the cation by Lcr+ organisms than by plasmid-deficient Lcr- mutants. According, Lcr+ yersiniae may possess unique ligands capable of recognizing Ca2+.  相似文献   

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