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1.
The ability of various subsets of poultry intestinal microbiota to protect turkeys from colonization by Campylobacter jejuni was investigated. Community subsets were generated in vivo by inoculation of day-old poults with the cecal contents of a Campylobacter-free adult turkey, followed by treatment with one antimicrobial, either virginiamycin, enrofloxacin, neomycin, or vancomycin. The C. jejuni loads of the enrofloxacin-, neomycin-, and vancomycin-derived communities were decreased by 1 log, 2 logs, and 4 logs, respectively. Examination of the constituents of the derived communities via the array-based method oligonucleotide fingerprinting of rRNA genes detected a subtype of Megamonas hypermegale specific to the C. jejuni-suppressive treatments.Campylobacter jejuni, a spiral, flagellated epsilonproteobacterial commensal of poultry, is the predominant cause of bacterial food-borne illness in the United States, resulting in approximately 2 million cases per year. A role for endogenous poultry intestinal microbiota in competitive exclusion (CE) of Campylobacter was first investigated in 1982 (38). Since then, numerous studies have attempted to identify microbes associated with Campylobacter CE. Suspensions of intestinal bacteria, isolated from Campylobacter-free adult poultry and passaged under strict anaerobic conditions, were found to protect chicks from colonization by the pathogen (31). Bacteria derived from the scrapings of broiler intestinal mucosa were proven more effective than the earlier fecal culture, a result not surprising, as Campylobacter is known to preferentially colonize cecal crypts (4, 39). The CE function of the bacterial suspensions decreased with time in storage, however (39, 40). Evidence also indicates that CE may depend on the presence of strictly anaerobic bacteria (31). As an oxygen gradient likely occurs from the host epithelium into the luminal contents, a CE role for both mucosal and luminal microbes in concert is likely.Attempts have been made to identify specific microbes antagonistic to Campylobacter, and initial attempts isolated mucin-dwelling organisms with in vitro antagonistic effects against the pathogen (35, 36). Recent experiments have identified numerous bacterial groups producing anti-Campylobacter bacteriocins (29, 41, 42, 44, 45). Direct treatment of market-weight birds with the therapeutic bacteriocin Enterococcus faecium E 50-52 is effective for removal of Campylobacter spp. immediately prior to slaughter (44).Despite progress toward a solution to contamination of poultry products by Campylobacter species, incomplete or intermittent CE protection, combined with a lack of studies addressing long-term CE efficacy, indicates that the Campylobacter colonization problem is far from solved (35). In addition, risk factors for campylobacteriosis other than direct consumption of contaminated poultry include consumption of fresh vegetables and bottled water (14). Campylobacter has been found in poultry manure used to fertilize crops as well as in runoff from these farms (22, 24, 50). We believe that novel approaches for studying microbial ecology in the gut are necessary for development of intervention strategies, including competitive exclusion.The work described here takes a functional approach to identify microbes associated with protection of the intestine from Campylobacter jejuni colonization, an approach we are calling antibiotic dissection. The cecal contents from a Campylobacter-free adult turkey were inoculated into day-old poults and the microbial communities in these poults modified by treatment with therapeutic levels of antibiotics. The resulting modified microbiota were then tested for the ability to outcompete a C. jejuni challenge, and a microbe potentially associated with C. jejuni exclusion was identified.  相似文献   

2.
Source attribution using molecular subtypes has implicated cattle and sheep as sources of human Campylobacter infection. Whether the Campylobacter subtypes associated with cattle and sheep vary spatiotemporally remains poorly known, especially at national levels. Here we describe spatiotemporal patterns of prevalence, bacterial enumeration, and subtype composition in Campylobacter isolates from cattle and sheep feces from northeastern (63 farms, 414 samples) and southwestern (71 farms, 449 samples) Scotland during 2005 to 2006. Isolates (201) were categorized as sequence type (ST), as clonal complex (CC), and as Campylobacter jejuni or Campylobacter coli using multilocus sequence typing (MLST). No significant difference in average prevalence (cattle, 22%; sheep, 25%) or average enumeration (cattle, 2.7 × 104 CFU/g; sheep, 2.0 × 105 CFU/g) was found between hosts or regions. The four most common STs (C. jejuni ST-19, ST-42, and ST-61 and C. coli ST-827) occurred in both hosts, whereas STs of the C. coli ST-828 clonal complex were more common in sheep. Neither host yielded evidence for regional differences in ST, CC, or MLST allele composition. Isolates from the two hosts combined, categorized as ST or CC, were more similar within than between farms but showed no further spatiotemporal trends up to 330 km and 50 weeks between farm samples. In contrast, both regions yielded evidence for significant differences in ST, CC, and allele composition between hosts, such that 65% of isolates could be attributed to a known host. These results suggest that cattle and sheep within the spatiotemporal scales analyzed are each capable of contributing homogeneous Campylobacter strains to human infections.Campylobacter species are the largest cause of bacterial intestinal infection in the developed and developing world (3). Almost all reported human Campylobacter infections in the United Kingdom are caused by Campylobacter jejuni, which accounts for approximately 92% of cases, and Campylobacter coli, which accounts for most of the rest (8). Campylobacter species are carried asymptomatically in a wide range of host animals and excreted into the environment in feces (23). Humans can be infected by several routes including consumption of contaminated water (14) or food (23); indeed, case control studies indicate that consumption of poultry meat is a risk factor (11, 12, 28), but other foods including unpasteurized milk (33) and meat from cattle and sheep contaminated at the abattoir might be important (30).Cattle and sheep on farms are major hosts of Campylobacter, with up to 89% of cattle herds (31) and up to 55% of sheep flocks (26) being infected. The prevalence of C. jejuni and C. coli combined, estimated at the level of individual animals from fecal specimens, is 23 to 54% in cattle (22, 25) and up to 20% in sheep (37). Campylobacter enumeration in feces shed from individual animals ranges from <102 to 107 CFU/g in both hosts (31), and the concentration shed varies with time. Meat products of cattle and sheep, by contrast, have generally lower levels of Campylobacter contamination. Prevalence values are 0.5 to 4.9% in surveys of retail beef (11a, 17, 36) and 6.9 to 12.6% in surveys of retail lamb and mutton (17, 35).Clinical Campylobacter strains can be attributed to infection sources in animals by comparing subtype frequencies in clinical cases with those in different candidate sources, including cattle, sheep, pigs, and the physical environment. Campylobacter subtype data sets are most transferable when subtypes are defined as sequence type (ST) using multilocus sequence typing (MLST). Three recent MLST-based studies based in northwestern England (34), mainland Scotland (29), northeastern Scotland (32), and New Zealand (24) have used source attribution models to infer the source of human clinical infection. The results suggest that retail chicken is the source with the highest (55 to 80%) attribution while cattle and sheep combined are ranked second (20 to 40%). These attribution models require further empirical validation but appear to be showing broadly similar results.Attribution of human Campylobacter infections to cattle and sheep raises the question of whether Campylobacter subtypes infecting farm cattle and sheep are generally homogeneous or tend to have spatiotemporal structure. Regarding spatial differences, isolates of C. jejuni from a 100-km2 study of farmland area with dairy cattle and sheep in northwestern England displayed increased genetic similarity up to 1 km apart but no further trend over distances of 1 to 14 km apart (7), and isolates from three dairy cattle farms 2 or 5 km apart in the same area demonstrated differences in the frequencies of strains of clonal complexes (CCs) ST-42 and ST-61 (15). Regarding temporal differences, isolates of C. jejuni from five dairy cattle farms in the same area demonstrated differences in the frequency of strains of CC ST-61 between the spring and summer of 2003 (15). Lastly, regarding host-associated strains, STs of CCs ST-21, ST-42, and ST-61 are associated with cattle, and the more limited data for STs from sheep also show the presence of ST-21 and ST-61 (7, 15).The larger-scale spatiotemporal structure of Campylobacter strains from cattle and sheep is poorly known. The main aims of the present study were (i) to characterize C. jejuni and C. coli from cattle and sheep from two distinct geographical Scottish regions in terms of Campylobacter prevalence and enumeration and C. jejuni and C. coli ST composition and (ii) to estimate the extent of host association of C. jejuni and C. coli STs from cattle versus sheep.  相似文献   

3.
This study aimed to assess the importance of quantitatively detecting Campylobacter spp. in environmental surface water. The prevalence and the quantity of Campylobacter spp., thermotolerant coliforms, and Escherichia coli in 2,471 samples collected weekly, over a 2-year period, from 13 rivers and 12 streams in the Eastern Townships, Québec, Canada, were determined. Overall, 1,071 (43%), 1,481 (60%), and 1,463 (59%) samples were positive for Campylobacter spp., thermotolerant coliforms, and E. coli, respectively. There were weak correlations between the weekly distributions of Campylobacter spp. and thermotolerant coliforms (Spearman''s ρ coefficient = 0.27; P = 0.008) and between the quantitative levels of the two classes of organisms (Kendall tau-b correlation coefficient = 0.233; P < 0.0001). Well water samples from the Eastern Townships were also tested. Five (10%) of 53 samples from private surface wells were positive for Campylobacter jejuni, of which only 2 were positive for thermotolerant coliforms. These findings suggest that microbial monitoring of raw water by using only fecal indicator organisms is not sufficient for assessing the occurrence or the load of thermophilic Campylobacter spp. Insights into the role of environmental water as sources for sporadic Campylobacter infection will require genus-specific monitoring techniques.Campylobacter jejuni is the leading reported cause of bacterial gastroenteritis in developed countries (2). In 2004 in Canada, Campylobacter enteritis was the leading notifiable enteric food- and waterborne disease, with 9,345 reported cases (http://dsol-smed.phac-aspc.gc.ca). In Quebec province alone, nearly 3,000 cases of diarrheal illness are attributed annually to Campylobacter enteritis, more than the combined total caused by Salmonella and Shigella species, Escherichia coli O157:H7, and Yersinia enterocolitica (15). Thomas et al. recently concluded that even these numbers appear to represent a substantial underestimate of the public health burden of this enteric pathogen and that for every case of Campylobacter infection reported in Canada each year, there are an additional 23 to 49 unreported cases (47).Raw milk, untreated surface water, and poultry have all been well documented as sources of Campylobacter outbreaks (1, 8, 22, 23, 28, 32, 33, 37, 39, 42, 49). Nevertheless, most clinical cases appear as isolated, sporadic infections for which the source is rarely identified (6). Identifying the sources and routes of transmission of campylobacteriosis is essential for developing effective, targeted preventive measures.There is ample opportunity for Campylobacter spp. to contaminate environmental water, including streams, rivers, and lakes. The genus colonizes a wide variety of hosts, from domestic animals to wild birds, and thus an extensive burden of organisms is excreted via animal fecal material (2, 8). Other potential sources include discharges from wastewater treatment plants.Testing for indicator organisms (typically thermotolerant coliforms or E. coli) has generally been considered to reflect adequately the presence of enteric pathogens; consequently, campylobacters have not been explicitly monitored in water. Numerous studies (most of which were small and of short duration) have reported conflicting results regarding the value of detecting E. coli to predict Campylobacter sp. presence (4, 9, 11, 12, 16, 17, 21, 27, 29, 31, 38, 40, 43, 48). We report here a large study that analyzed 2,471 water samples from 32 different sites over 2 years to resolve this question.  相似文献   

4.
Campylobacter jejuni is widely distributed in the environment, and river water has been shown to carry high levels of the organism. In this study, 244 C. jejuni isolates from three river catchment areas in New Zealand were characterized using multilocus sequence typing. Forty-nine of the 88 sequence types identified were new. The most common sequence types identified were ST-2381 (30 isolates), ST-45 (25 isolates), and ST-1225 (23 isolates). The majority of the sequence types identified in the river water could be attributed to wild bird fecal contamination. Two novel clonal complexes (CC) were identified, namely, CC ST-2381 (11 sequence types, 46 isolates) and CC ST-3640 (6 sequence types, 12 isolates), in which all of the sequence types were new. CC ST-2381 was the largest complex identified among the isolates and was present in two of the three rivers. None of the sequence types associated with the novel complexes has been identified among human isolates. The ST-2381 complex is not related to complexes associated with cattle, sheep, or poultry. The source of the novel complexes has yet to be identified.Contamination of the environment by bacterial pathogens is a significant health concern, as it provides a continuous source of organisms for the infection and reinfection of humans and animals. Enteric pathogens gain entry into the environment through the discharge of sewage into water and via contamination from animal feces (22). Fecal contamination is responsible for the continued presence and spread of a range of pathogenic organisms, including Campylobacter, norovirus, and Escherichia coli O157. Determining the roles of various environmental sources in human enteric disease requires an understanding of the distribution, survival, population structure, and pathogenic potential of the pathogens in the environment.Campylobacter is the most common cause of gastrointestinal illness in the industrialized world (17), imposing significant economic costs on health systems, and is associated with a number of neurological sequelae (32, 33). The majority of human campylobacter infections are caused by Campylobacter jejuni (90%), with Campylobacter coli mostly responsible for the remainder. Although Campylobacter has been isolated from a wide range of animals (41) and birds (47, 48), contaminated poultry and poultry products remain the most significant sources of human infections (10, 38, 50, 51). Campylobacter is a spiral gram-negative organism that grows best under low-oxygen conditions at 42°C. The organism is unable to grow outside an animal host, and survival in the environment is dependent on ambient temperature, oxygen levels, and sunlight.Studies worldwide examining rivers and waterways show that there is significant contamination by Campylobacter, with the sources being sewage outflow, direct fecal deposition, and pasture runoff (12, 22, 34, 37, 39). Similarly, coastal waters and estuaries can be contaminated by either sewage or bird fecal deposition (23, 35). The inability of Campylobacter to grow in the environment and its sensitivity to sunlight are thought to ensure that the organism is eventually purged from the system. However, the high levels of the organism identified in water systems have been highlighted as a risk for human infection.The characterization of campylobacter populations by multilocus sequence typing (MLST) has shown that the organism is weakly clonal and that certain clonal complexes are associated with particular animals (5, 9, 26). Isolates from human cases of infection show a wide variety of sequence types and many clonal complexes. Source attribution studies using MLST have identified poultry as causing approximately 60% of human infections (14, 38, 50). Cattle have been identified as a potential source of infection due to the high level of similarity between bovine and human strains (18, 19). There remains, however, a significant number of infections for which the source is not certain.New Zealand has one of the highest rates of campylobacteriosis in the developed world. This is due to the significant quantity of fresh chicken consumed coupled with high levels of contamination found in poultry products (1, 10, 51, 52). Campylobacter has been isolated from a range of environmental sources within New Zealand, including its rivers and streams (12, 37). Isolation rates for rivers in New Zealand range from 55 to 90%, comparable to results of studies overseas, and show the same seasonal variation as that seen elsewhere in the world (20). Pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) analysis identified indistinguishable macrorestriction profiles for cattle, human, and river isolates, suggesting river water as a potential source of infection (8). In this study, C. jejuni isolates from three rivers in New Zealand, two on the South Island and one on the North Island, were characterized using MLST.  相似文献   

5.
The microaerophilic human pathogen Campylobacter jejuni is the leading cause of food-borne bacterial gastroenteritis in the developed world. During transmission through the food chain and the environment, the organism must survive stressful environmental conditions, particularly high oxygen levels. Biofilm formation has been suggested to play a role in the environmental survival of this organism. In this work we show that C. jejuni NCTC 11168 biofilms developed more rapidly under environmental and food-chain-relevant aerobic conditions (20% O2) than under microaerobic conditions (5% O2, 10% CO2), although final levels of biofilms were comparable after 3 days. Staining of biofilms with Congo red gave results similar to those obtained with the commonly used crystal violet staining. The level of biofilm formation by nonmotile aflagellate strains was lower than that observed for the motile flagellated strain but nonetheless increased under aerobic conditions, suggesting the presence of flagellum-dependent and flagellum-independent mechanisms of biofilm formation in C. jejuni. Moreover, preformed biofilms shed high numbers of viable C. jejuni cells into the culture supernatant independently of the oxygen concentration, suggesting a continuous passive release of cells into the medium rather than a condition-specific active mechanism of dispersal. We conclude that under aerobic or stressful conditions, C. jejuni adapts to a biofilm lifestyle, allowing survival under detrimental conditions, and that such a biofilm can function as a reservoir of viable planktonic cells. The increased level of biofilm formation under aerobic conditions is likely to be an adaptation contributing to the zoonotic lifestyle of C. jejuni.Infection with Campylobacter jejuni is the leading cause of food-borne bacterial gastroenteritis in the developed world and is often associated with the consumption of undercooked poultry products (19). The United Kingdom Health Protection Agency reported more than 45,000 laboratory-confirmed cases for England and Wales in 2006 alone, although this is thought to be a 5- to 10-fold underestimation of the total number of community incidents (20, 43). The symptoms associated with C. jejuni infection usually last between 2 and 5 days and include diarrhea, vomiting, and stomach pains. Sequelae of C. jejuni infection include more-serious autoimmune diseases, such as Guillain-Barré syndrome, Miller-Fisher syndrome (18), and reactive arthritis (15).Poultry represents a major natural reservoir for C. jejuni, since the organism is usually considered to be a commensal and can reach densities as high as 1 × 108 CFU g of cecal contents−1 (35). As a result, large numbers of bacteria are shed via feces into the environment, and consequently, C. jejuni can spread rapidly through a flock of birds in a broiler house (1). While well adapted to life in the avian host, C. jejuni must survive during transit between hosts and on food products under stressful storage conditions, including high and low temperatures and atmospheric oxygen levels. The organism must therefore have mechanisms to protect itself from unfavorable conditions.Biofilm formation is a well-characterized bacterial mode of growth and survival, where the surface-attached and matrix-encased bacteria are protected from stressful environmental conditions, such as UV radiation, predation, and desiccation (7, 8, 28). Bacteria in biofilms are also known to be >1,000-fold more resistant to disinfectants and antimicrobials than their planktonic counterparts (11). Several reports have now shown that Campylobacter species are capable of forming a monospecies biofilm (21, 22) and can colonize a preexisting biofilm (14). Biofilm formation can be demonstrated under laboratory conditions, and environmental biofilms, from poultry-rearing facilities, have been shown to contain Campylobacter (5, 32, 44). Campylobacter biofilms allow the organism to survive up to twice as long under atmospheric conditions (2, 21) and in water systems (27).Molecular understanding of biofilm formation by Campylobacter is still in its infancy, although there is evidence for the role of flagella and gene regulation in biofilm formation. Indeed, a flaAB mutant shows reduced biofilm formation (34); mutants defective in flagellar modification (cj1337) and assembly (fliS) are defective in adhering to glass surfaces (21); and a proteomic study of biofilm-grown cells shows increased levels of motility-associated proteins, including FlaA, FlaB, FliD, FlgG, and FlgG2 (22). Flagella are also implicated in adhesion and in biofilm formation and development in other bacterial species, including Aeromonas, Vibrio, Yersinia, and Pseudomonas species (3, 23, 24, 31, 42).Previous studies of Campylobacter biofilms have focused mostly on biofilm formation under standard microaerobic laboratory conditions. In this work we have examined the formation of biofilms by motile and nonmotile C. jejuni strains under atmospheric conditions that are relevant to the survival of this organism in a commercial context of environmental and food-based transmission.  相似文献   

6.
The ferric enterobactin (FeEnt) receptor CfrA is present in the majority of Campylobacter jejuni isolates and is responsible for high-affinity iron acquisition. Our recent work and that of others strongly suggested the existence of another FeEnt uptake system in Campylobacter. Here we have identified and characterized a new FeEnt receptor (designated CfrB) using both in vitro and in vivo systems. CfrB, a homolog of C. jejuni NCTC 11168 Cj0444, shares approximately 34% of amino acid identity with CfrA. Alignment of complete CfrB sequences showed that the CfrB is highly conserved in Campylobacter. Immunoblotting analysis using CfrB-specific antiserum demonstrated that CfrB was dramatically induced under iron-restricted conditions and was produced in the majority of Campylobacter coli (41 out of 45) and in some C. jejuni (8 out of 32) primary strains from various sources and from geographically diverse areas. All of the CfrB-producing C. coli strains also produced CfrA, which was rarely observed in the tested C. jejuni strains. Isogenic cfrB, cfrA, and cfrA cfrB double mutants were constructed in 43 diverse Campylobacter strains. Growth promotion assays using these mutants demonstrated that CfrB has a major role in FeEnt iron acquisition in C. coli. Chicken colonization experiments indicated that inactivation of the cfrB gene alone greatly reduced and even abolished Campylobacter colonization of the intestines. A growth assay using CfrB-specific antiserum strongly suggested that specific CfrB antibodies could block the function of CfrB and diminish FeEnt-mediated growth promotion under iron-restricted conditions. Together, this work reveals the complexity of FeEnt systems in the two closely related Campylobacter species and demonstrates the important role of the new FeEnt receptor CfrB in Campylobacter iron acquisition and in vivo colonization.Campylobacter species have emerged as the leading bacterial cause of food-borne human diseases in many industrialized countries since the late 1970s (25). Two major Campylobacter species, Campylobacter jejuni and Campylobacter coli, cause watery diarrhea and/or hemorrhagic colitis in humans and are also associated with Guillain-Barré syndrome, an acute flaccid paralysis that may compromise respiratory muscle function, resulting in death (24). In parallel to their increased prevalence, members of Campylobacter have become increasingly resistant to antibiotics, including fluoroquinolones and macrolides, the major drugs of choice for treating human campylobacteriosis (10). Therefore, development of new strategies to prevent and control Campylobacter infections in humans and animal reservoirs is urgently needed, which greatly relies on the better understanding of Campylobacter pathogenesis.Despite recent advances in understanding of the pathobiology of C. jejuni (9, 39), the virulence mechanisms of Campylobacter remain poorly understood. Iron is the most abundant transition metal in living organisms, with critical roles in many diverse biological systems (2); thus, iron acquisition is essential for survival and virulence of pathogenic bacteria in the host (5, 31). Examination of iron uptake in Campylobacter began in the 1980s (12), but iron uptake systems, and the associated regulatory systems, in Campylobacter species are now just beginning to be elucidated (reviewed by Miller et al. [22], Stintzi et al. [34], and Wooldridge and van Vliet [37]). Genomic data have shown a large number of genes implicated in iron scavenging, metabolism, storage, and regulation in C. jejuni (22, 34, 37). Several iron uptake systems have been identified and characterized (22, 34); among these, the ferric enterobactin (FeEnt) iron acquisition system is of particular interest because enterobactin (Ent) has the highest affinity for ferric iron of any natural siderophore compound tested (35). Furthermore, Ent is produced by a wide variety of commensal bacteria in the intestines, and this compound is likely to be produced in significant amounts by the resident microflora in the gut (37). Thus, FeEnt may be a significant source of iron for Campylobacter species during intestinal colonization even though Campylobacter species do not appear have the capacity to synthesize Ent (34).A FeEnt acquisition system in C. jejuni was identified which comprises an outer membrane receptor, CfrA, and cognate components, including a TonB-ExbB-ExbD protein complex and an ABC transporter system CeuBCDE (22, 34). The FeEnt receptor CfrA is induced under iron-restricted conditions and plays a critical role in iron acquisition and in vivo colonization by C. jejuni (27). A recent report (40) provides further molecular, antigenic, and functional evidence suggesting that CfrA is a promising subunit vaccine for preventing and controlling C. jejuni infection in humans and animal reservoirs. Interestingly, in this study one C. jejuni strain (JL11), which does not have a gene highly homologous to cfrA, could efficiently utilize FeEnt as a sole iron source for growth (40). An early study also showed that an isogenic cfrA mutant of a human C. coli strain was still fully capable of utilizing FeEnt as a sole iron source for growth (15). These studies strongly suggest that Campylobacter species possess an additional system for FeEnt-mediated iron acquisition.In this study, we demonstrate that a homolog of the C. jejuni NCTC 11168 protein Cj0444 (28) is a FeEnt receptor, designated CfrB, in Campylobacter. CfrB is highly conserved among members of Campylobacter and plays an important role in the colonization of the intestine by both C. jejuni and C. coli.  相似文献   

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8.
Campylobacter jejuni is a recognized and common gastrointestinal pathogen in most parts of the world. Human infections are often food borne, and the bacterium is frequent among poultry and other food animals. However, much less is known about the epidemiology of C. jejuni in the environment and what mechanisms the bacterium depends on to tolerate low pH. The sensitive nature of C. jejuni stands in contrast to the fact that it is difficult to eradicate from poultry production, and even more contradictory is the fact that the bacterium is able to survive the acidic passage through the human stomach. Here we expand the knowledge on C. jejuni acid tolerance by looking at protozoa as a potential epidemiological pathway of infection. Our results showed that when C. jejuni cells were coincubated with Acanthamoeba polyphaga in acidified phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) or tap water, the bacteria could tolerate pHs far below those in their normal range, even surviving at pH 4 for 20 h and at pH 2 for 5 h. Interestingly, moderately acidic conditions (pH 4 and 5) were shown to trigger C. jejuni motility as well as to increase adhesion/internalization of bacteria into A. polyphaga. Taken together, the results suggest that protozoa may act as protective hosts against harsh conditions and might be a potential risk factor for C. jejuni infections. These findings may be important for our understanding of C. jejuni passage through the gastrointestinal tract and for hygiene practices used in poultry settings.Campylobacter jejuni is a major cause of human bacterial enteritis, with an incidence exceeding that of Salmonella spp. or Escherichia coli O157 (6, 28). Most infections are associated with consumption of contaminated food, primarily undercooked chicken meat, but unchlorinated water and unpasteurized milk can also be sources of Campylobacter infection (reviewed in reference 13). Apart from food-borne sources, additional risk factors include close contact with pets or farm animals and activities in recreational waters (reviewed in reference 13). C. jejuni is widely distributed in many animals and has also been reported to be isolated from surface waters (15) and, occasionally, even from groundwater (31). However, the bacterium has been shown to be relatively sensitive to environmental stress outside its hosts, including heating, disinfectants, oxygen exposure, osmotic stress, desiccation, and acidity (5, 9, 19, 35).Several hygiene practices have been implemented in broiler production facilities to reduce C. jejuni carriage in live birds. Such measures include hygiene barriers such as changing clothes before entering the broiler houses and disinfection of the interior of the building with acid between flock rotations (20). Such efforts may reduce the number of C. jejuni organisms, but the bacterium is still difficult to eradicate from contaminated farms, and subsequent outbreaks at the same farm are not rare (11). Contradictory to its fragility in different in vitro settings, C. jejuni seems to be well adapted to survive the acidic milieu of the human stomach during the passage to the lower intestinal tract, where infection is established. This is illustrated by the very low infectious dose for both broiler chickens (7) and humans (4) and indicates that the bacterium has developed strategies to avoid or withstand low pH in order to survive the transit. The gastric acid is the first line of defense against ingested pathogens. During fasting conditions in healthy humans, the luminal pH in the stomach is usually around 2.0, but it may range from 1.5 to 5.5 depending on food intake, such as a diet with a high pH, or the use of proton pump inhibitors (36). Laboratory studies have demonstrated that C. jejuni in solution survives a maximum of 30 min at pH levels below pH 2.5 and for up to 60 min at pH 3 (5, 23). When the bacterium is mixed with food, it seems to be protected, and it has been shown that C. jejuni inoculated onto ground beef survived at pH 2.5 for 2 h at 37°C (37).In the last few years, laboratory studies have identified a new potential epidemiological pathway for C. jejuni in which the bacterium colonizes unicellular eukaryotic organisms (protozoa) and thereby acquires protection from adverse environmental conditions (2, 17, 29). C. jejuni can colonize protozoa and survive longer in its protozoan host than as a free-living bacterium, and given the right temperature, the bacterium can also replicate intracellularly (1, 2). Protozoa, especially amoebae, serve as natural reservoirs or vehicles for the dissemination of several other pathogenic bacteria, including Legionella pneumophila (25), Vibrio cholerae (34), and Helicobacter pylori (38). Amoebae are abundant in virtually all natural water systems and can be found grazing on biofilms in water supply systems (14). In their trophozoite form, amoebae are naturally resistant to many environmental factors that are lethal to Campylobacter, and they can multiply at pHs ranging from 4 to 12 (16). Moreover, amoebae can enter a cyst form when challenged with unfavorable conditions. These cysts generally have a double cell wall that might explain their capability to survive chlorination, antimicrobials, and changes in pH and osmotic pressure. This resistance feature of amoebae makes them suitable hosts for other, less-resistant microorganisms (16, 32).In this study, we built on the advances gained in protozoa-Campylobacter research and investigated whether internalization of C. jejuni into Acanthamoeba affects bacterial tolerance to hydrochloric acid. Using an in vitro setup, we found that C. jejuni survived better in an acidic environment when it was coincubated with amoebae than when it was incubated as bacteria in solution. Furthermore, we show that bacterial motility and adhesion to and internalization into amoeba are trigged by moderately acidic conditions. The implications of these findings for the survival of C. jejuni in food production as well as in transit through the human stomach are discussed.  相似文献   

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10.
11.
The purpose of this work was to evaluate the evolutionary history of Campylobacter coli isolates derived from multiple host sources and to use microarray comparative genomic hybridization to assess whether there are particular genes comprising the dispensable portion of the genome that are more commonly associated with certain host species. Genotyping and ClonalFrame analyses of an expanded 16-gene multilocus sequence typing (MLST) data set involving 85 isolates from 4 different hosts species tentatively supported the development of C. coli host-preferred groups and suggested that recombination has played various roles in their diversification; however, geography could not be excluded as a contributing factor underlying the history of some of the groups. Population genetic analyses of the C. coli pubMLST database by use of STRUCTURE suggested that isolates from swine form a relatively homogeneous genetic group, that chicken and human isolates show considerable genetic overlap, that isolates from ducks and wild birds have similarity with environmental water samples and that turkey isolates have a connection with human infection similar to that observed for chickens. Analysis of molecular variance (AMOVA) was performed on these same data and suggested that host species was a significant factor in explaining genetic variation and that macrogeography (North America, Europe, and the United Kingdom) was not. The microarray comparative genomic hybridization data suggested that there were combinations of genes more commonly associated with isolates derived from particular hosts and, combined with the results on evolutionary history, suggest that this is due to a combination of common ancestry in some cases and lateral gene transfer in others.Campylobacter species are a leading bacterial cause of gastroenteritis within the United States and throughout much of the rest of the developed world. According to the CDC, there are an estimated 2 million to 4 million cases of Campylobacter illness each year in the United States (37). Campylobacter jejuni is generally recognized as the predominant cause of campylobacteriosis, responsible for approximately 90% of reported cases, while the majority of the remainder are caused by the closely related sister species Campylobacter coli (27). Not surprisingly, therefore, the majority of research on Campylobacter has centered on C. jejuni, and C. coli is a less studied organism.A multilocus sequence typing (MLST) scheme of C. jejuni was first developed by Dingle et al. (13) on the basis of the genome sequence of C. jejuni NCTC 11168. There have also been a number of studies using the genome sequence data to develop microarrays for gene presence/absence determination across strains of C. jejuni and to identify the core genome components for the species (6, 15, 32, 33, 42, 43, 53, 57). Although C. coli is responsible for fewer food-borne illnesses than C. jejuni, the impact of C. coli is still substantial, and there is also evidence that C. coli may carry higher levels of resistance to some antibiotics (1). C. coli and C. jejuni also tend to differ in their relative prevalences in animal host species and various environmental sources (4, 48, 58), and there is some evidence that both taxa may include groups of host-specific putative ecotype strains (7, 36, 38, 39, 52, 56). At present, there is only a single draft genome sequence available for C. coli, and there are no microarray comparative genomic hybridization data for C. coli strains. Thus, there is no information on intraspecies variability in gene presence/absence in C. coli and how such variability might correlate with host species.The purpose of this work was to develop and apply an expanded 16-locus MLST genotyping scheme to evaluate the evolutionary history of Campylobacter coli isolates derived from multiple host sources and to use microarray comparative genomic hybridization to assess whether there are particular genes comprising the dispensable portion of the genome that are more commonly associated with isolates derived from different host species.  相似文献   

12.
13.
Genetic attribution of bacterial genotypes has become a major tool in the investigation of the epidemiology of campylobacteriosis and has implicated retail chicken meat as the major source of human infection in several countries. To investigate the robustness of this approach to the provenance of the reference data sets used, a collection of 742 Campylobacter jejuni and 261 Campylobacter coli isolates obtained from United Kingdom-sourced chicken meat was established and typed by multilocus sequence typing. Comparative analyses of the data with those from other isolates sourced from a variety of host animals and countries were undertaken by genetic attribution, genealogical, and population genetic approaches. The genotypes from the United Kingdom data set were highly diverse, yet structured into sequence types, clonal complexes, and genealogical groups very similar to those seen in chicken isolates from the Netherlands, the United States, and Senegal, but more distinct from isolates obtained from ruminant, swine, and wild bird sources. Assignment analyses consistently grouped isolates from different host animal sources regardless of geographical source; these associations were more robust than geographic associations across isolates from three continents. We conclude that, notwithstanding the high diversity of these pathogens, there is a strong signal of association of multilocus genotypes with particular hosts, which is greater than the geographic signal. These findings are consistent with local and international transmission of host-associated lineages among food animal species and provide a foundation for further improvements in genetic attribution.Members of the genus Campylobacter, specifically Campylobacter jejuni and Campylobacter coli, are major causes of human morbidity worldwide and are the most common bacterial cause of gastroenteritis in industrialized countries (4). These bacteria are commonly found as apparently harmless members of the gut microbiota of many farmed and wild mammals and birds. This, together with the sporadic nature of most human disease, has contributed to the remaining uncertainty regarding the relative importance of different potential sources of human infection (34), inhibiting the implementation of effective public health interventions, which may have major economic consequences on intensive food production. Human infection with C. jejuni and C. coli has been epidemiologically linked to contact with pets and farm animals and to consumption of red meat, water, milk, and poultry (17, 20, 34).The advent of multilocus sequence typing (MLST) for both C. jejuni and C. coli and its application to large and diverse isolate collections have enhanced understanding of the ecology (38) and epidemiology (10) of these important pathogens. It has been shown that there is substantial genetic differentiation between farmed ruminants and chickens (29) and even greater differentiation between farmed chickens and wild birds at the same farm site (5). Furthermore, MLST supports the application of population genetic attribution models (29, 44) to attribute human disease to host species of origin, based on reference data sets from a range of animal species and the environment. These studies (33, 37, 44) have confirmed observational studies (6, 18, 34, 42) which implicated the consumption of poultry, or food cross-contaminated from poultry, as an important source of human infection, accounting for 40 to 80% of cases. Although these genetic attribution studies confirm that a substantial proportion of infection comes from chicken, their main limitation was the restricted reference data sets available. The extent to which Campylobacter populations differ among host species and environmental niches and the importance of geographical and temporal effects are incompletely characterized. These are central to the success of genetic attribution studies.The usefulness of the genetic attribution approach therefore motivates the establishment of larger and better-sampled reference data sets and highlights the need to understand the variation within these populations to improve estimates of the relative importance of host association to population structure compared to other effects. As well as supporting human disease attribution, this allows insights into bacterial ecology and evolution. The present study describes the genetic diversity and structure of a large representative collection of C. jejuni and C. coli isolates from retail poultry in the United Kingdom. This collection was analyzed with published collections of isolates from a range of different host species and geographical areas to evaluate the impact of large-scale geographical distance on host-associated genetic differentiation.  相似文献   

14.
Campylobacter spp. are responsible for a large number of the bacterial food poisoning cases worldwide. Despite being sensitive to oxygen and nutritionally fastidious, Campylobacter spp. are able to survive in food processing environments and reach consumers in sufficient numbers to cause disease. To investigate Campylobacter persistence on processed chicken, exudates from chickens produced for consumer sale were collected and sterilized. Two types of exudates from chicken products were collected: enhanced, where a marinade was added to the chickens during processing, and nonenhanced, where no additives were added during processing. Exudates from enhanced chicken products examined in this study contained a mixture of polyphosphates. Exudate samples were inoculated with Campylobacter jejuni or Campylobacter coli strains and incubated under a range of environmental conditions, and viable bacteria present in the resultant cultures were enumerated. When incubated at 42°C in a microaerobic environment, exudates from enhanced chicken products resulted in increased survival of C. jejuni and C. coli compared with that in nonenhanced exudates in the range of <1 to >4 log CFU/ml. Under more relevant food storage conditions (4°C and normal atmosphere), the exudates from enhanced chicken products also demonstrated improved Campylobacter survival compared with that in nonenhanced exudates. Polyphosphates present in the enhanced exudates were determined to be largely responsible for the improved survival observed when the two types of exudates were compared. Therefore, polyphosphates used to enhance chicken quality aid in sustaining the numbers of Campylobacter bacteria, increasing the opportunity for disease via cross-contamination or improperly cooked poultry.Campylobacter species are the major causative agent of food-borne gastrointestinal bacterial infections in the developed world (6, 11, 21). Poultry products are a major source for the introduction of Campylobacter into the food supply (15, 16). Improperly cooked poultry and cross-contamination of other foods by raw poultry are common methods for transmission of Campylobacter to humans (5). However, Campylobacter spp. are nutritionally fastidious organisms that are sensitive to the oxygen levels present in a normal environment (O2 = 20.9%) (21). Therefore, Campylobacter appears an unlikely candidate to persist within poultry processing and storage environments at levels sufficient to cause human disease. This conundrum directly leads to a question: what then are the elements that contribute to the ability of Campylobacter to survive through poultry processing and cold storage?To investigate this question, a food-relevant environment consisting of chicken weepage or exudate can be used to perform survival experiments on Campylobacter species. Strains of Campylobacter jejuni and Campylobacter coli were used for the survival studies since these two species are responsible for the vast majority of human cases of campylobacteriosis (20, 28). Chicken exudate is the fluid that seeps out from processed poultry carcasses and is often found to be contaminated with considerable numbers of Campylobacter bacteria. It is comprised of water, blood, fats, and other materials added to the poultry during processing. Sterilized poultry exudates make for a convenient experimental material that is also relevant to the conditions which Campylobacter will experience as a contaminant of processed poultry (2, 3). Two different types of chicken exudates were collected from commercial producers, one from chickens processed without additives (nonenhanced) and the other from chickens that were treated with a commercial marinade to increase the quality and appeal of the meat at market (enhanced). The commercial poultry marinades contain a significant amount of polyphosphate additives. Polyphosphates comprise a group of food additives that are utilized within poultry processing to enhance the moisture absorbance, color, and flavor and to reduce product shrinkage of poultry (24, 29-32). Polyphosphates have also been shown to have an antimicrobial effect on several different bacterial species (8, 10, 12). The goal of the research was to determine if polyphosphates contribute to the ability of Campylobacter to survive and persist through the supply chain, thus directly increasing the opportunity for Campylobacter-mediated food poisoning of consumers.  相似文献   

15.
Campylobacter jejuni, a gram-negative, microaerophilic bacterium, is a predominant cause of bacterial gastroenteritis in humans. Although considered fragile and fastidious and lacking many classical stress response mechanisms, C. jejuni exhibits a remarkable capacity for survival and adaptation, successfully infecting humans and persisting in the environment. Consequently, understanding the physiological and genetic properties that allow C. jejuni to survive and adapt to various stress conditions is crucial for therapeutic interventions. Of importance is polyphosphate (poly-P) kinase 1 (PPK1), which is a key enzyme mediating the synthesis of poly-P, an essential molecule for survival, mediating stress responses, host colonization, and virulence in many bacteria. Therefore, we investigated the role of PPK1 in C. jejuni pathogenesis, stress survival, and adaptation. Our findings demonstrate that a C. jejuni Δppk1 mutant was deficient in poly-P accumulation, which was associated with a decreased ability to form viable-but-nonculturable cells under acid stress. The Δppk1 mutant also showed a decreased frequency of natural transformation and an increased susceptibility to various antimicrobials. Furthermore, the Δppk1 mutant was characterized by a dose-dependent deficiency in chicken colonization. Complementation of the Δppk1 mutant with the wild-type copy of ppk1 restored the deficient phenotypes to levels similar to those of the wild type. Our results suggest that poly-P plays an important role in stress survival and adaptation and might contribute to genome plasticity and the spread and development of antimicrobial resistance in C. jejuni. These findings highlight the potential of PPK1 as a novel target for therapeutic interventions.Campylobacter jejuni, a gram-negative, microaerophilic bacterium, occurs as a commensal among the intestinal microflora of various animals, especially chickens and cattle (6, 73). However, C. jejuni can infect human hosts, invading the intestinal mucosa and causing watery and/or bloody diarrhea (9). C. jejuni is transmitted to humans primarily through the consumption of contaminated chicken products, raw milk, or water (2, 3). Currently, C. jejuni is considered a leading bacterial cause of human food-borne gastroenteritis (3, 61) and has also been associated with a plethora of symptoms, including acute neuromuscular paralysis (Guillain-Barré syndrome) (26). Since an appropriate vaccine for human campylobacteriosis has yet to be introduced, it has been suggested that C. jejuni infections might be alternatively controlled by reducing colonization in food animals (73). Consequently, determining the physiological and genetic properties that allow the survival of C. jejuni and its colonization of animal hosts, pathogenicity, and adaptation to various stresses is of critical importance.The mechanisms underlying C. jejuni adaptation and survival under stresses imposed by its environment and host are not well understood. High variability between different C. jejuni strains and the unavailability of appropriate genetic tools and animal models have contributed to the lack of knowledge regarding its stress tolerance and pathogenicity. However, it is suggested that the capacity of C. jejuni to form viable-but-nonculturable (VBNC) cells under stress (14) and its readiness for natural transformation (68) and acquiring resistance to antibiotics (39) are among the strategies that promote stress adaptation and survival. Although little is known about the genetics underlying these processes, recent advances in C. jejuni genomics show that this bacterium carries several important genes that might play key roles in mediating stress adaptation and survival. Of particular interest are genes encoding polyphosphate (poly-P) kinases, ppk1 (CJJ81176_1361) and ppk2 (CJJ81176_0633), that were predicted to be involved in the metabolism of poly-P (22, 25, 47), an intracellular granule that impacts several physiological properties in many bacterial species, including pathogenicity, host colonization, adaptation to different environments, and survival (28, 31, 46).Poly-P kinase 1 (PPK1) is encoded by ppk1, which mediates the synthesis of all or most of the poly-P in the cell (33), while ppk2 encodes an enzyme (PPK2) that synthesizes GTP from poly-P (27). Both ppk genes have been associated with the metabolism of poly-P, which consists of phosphate residues that are linked by high-energy phosphoanhydride bonds and is widely distributed in bacterial species (60). Previous reports showed that poly-P plays important roles in bacterial survival and stress tolerance, including ATP production (8), entry of DNA through membrane channels (13, 54), capsule composition (67), maintaining nutritional requirements during starvation (34), motility, biofilm formation, and resistance to oxidative, osmotic, heat, acid and alkaline stresses, and stationary-phase survival (28, 31, 46, 48, 50, 52, 65). Because of their importance in many bacterial species, it is not surprising to assume a role for PPK and poly-P in C. jejuni survival, colonization, and stress tolerance (8).Interestingly, PPK1 has been shown to be important for C. jejuni stress responses and pathogenicity (10). However, the role of ppk1 in key metabolic and physiological responses of C. jejuni still needs further analysis. For instance, it has been proposed that during starvation, poly-P might act as a reservoir for phosphorus and energy (7). Subsequently, poly-P would be crucial for maintaining viability/metabolism in stressed cells. This has been observed in H. pylori, where the occurrence of poly-P correlated with culturability and structurally intact cells (45). Poly-P-containing nonculturable H. pylori showed a capacity for ATP and mRNA synthesis after a nutrient stimulus (45). Consequently, poly-P might be an important factor for the formation of VBNC cells by stressed bacteria, including C. jejuni. Furthermore, natural transformation is perhaps one of the most important mechanisms in the adaptation of C. jejuni, and poly-P has been reported to play a role in the entry of DNA through membrane channels (13, 54). It follows that poly-P might be important for natural transformation, adaptation, and acquisition of antibiotic resistance genes in C. jejuni. Poly-P can further impact the survival and adaptation in C. jejuni by modulating antibiotic resistance properties. For example, poly-P interacted with Escherichia coli ribosomes (42), which are known targets of several antibiotics. These observations suggest that ppk1 might be linked to important physiology and functions such as VBNC cell formation, natural transformation, and antimicrobial resistance in C. jejuni. Therefore, in the present study, we determined the contribution of PPK1 to C. jejuni stress responses and adaptation, including the ability to form VBNC cells under acid stress, natural transformation, and antimicrobial resistance. Furthermore, we assessed the impact of ppk1 deletion on in vivo chicken colonization. Our findings highlight the importance of PPK1 in C. jejuni survival, adaptation to different environmental stresses, and in vivo colonization. These findings also indicate the suitability of PPK1 as a potential target for controlling the proliferation of this pathogen.  相似文献   

16.
Campylobacter jejuni is one of the most important causes of human diarrhea worldwide. In the present work, multilocus sequence typing was used to study the genotypic diversity of 145 C. jejuni isolates from 135 chicken meat preparations sampled across Belgium. Isolates were further typed by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis, and their susceptibilities to six antimicrobials were determined. Fifty-seven sequence types (STs) were identified; 26.8% of the total typed isolates were ST-50, ST-45, or ST-257, belonging to clonal complex CC-21, CC-45, or CC-257, respectively. One clonal group comprised 22% (32/145) of all isolates, originating from five different companies and isolated over seven sampling months. Additionally, 53.1% of C. jejuni isolates were resistant to ciprofloxacin, and 48.2% were resistant to tetracycline; 28.9% (42/145) of all isolates were resistant to both ciprofloxacin and tetracycline. The correlation between certain C. jejuni clonal groups and resistance to ciprofloxacin and tetracycline was notable. C. jejuni isolates assigned to CC-21 (n = 35) were frequently resistant to ciprofloxacin (65.7%) and tetracycline (40%); however, 90% (18/20) of the isolates assigned to CC-45 were pansusceptible. The present study demonstrates that certain C. jejuni genotypes recur frequently in the chicken meat supply. The results of molecular typing, combined with data on sample sources, indicate a possible dissemination of C. jejuni clones with high resistance to ciprofloxacin and/or tetracycline. Whether certain clonal groups are common in the environment and repeatedly infect Belgian broiler flocks or whether they have the potential to persist on farms or in slaughterhouses needs further investigation.Campylobacter jejuni is among the most common bacterial causes of human gastroenteritis worldwide (4, 23). Infected humans exhibit a range of clinical symptoms from mild, watery diarrhea to severe inflammatory diarrhea (14). In addition, C. jejuni has been identified as an important infectious trigger for Guillain-Barré syndrome, the most common cause of acute flaccid paralysis in polio-free regions (16). Another issue of concern regarding Campylobacter is the increase in antimicrobial resistance appearing in various regions around the world (1). Infection with an antimicrobial-resistant Campylobacter strain may lead to a suboptimal outcome of antimicrobial treatment or even to treatment failure (11).Consumption of contaminated water and raw milk has been implicated in campylobacteriosis outbreaks (23). However, the majority of human cases are sporadic, and consumption or mishandling of contaminated raw or undercooked poultry meat is believed to be an important source of infection. Risk assessment studies, outbreak investigations, and case-control reports all incriminate chicken meat as a major source, perhaps the major source, of food-borne transmission (14, 17, 32, 48). In Belgium in 1999, a controlled withdrawal of poultry products from sale due to alleged dioxin contamination resulted in a 40% reduction in the frequency of human campylobacteriosis (44). Thereafter and since the year 2000, the Campylobacter contamination of Belgian poultry carcasses and meat has been monitored by the Federal Agency for the Safety of the Food Chain, and the rate of positive samples is regarded as high. In 2006, 55.5% of cecal samples (n = 6,443) from Belgian broilers at slaughter tested positive for Campylobacter (3). In 2007, an industry-focused survey reported that 48% of Belgian chicken meat preparations (n = 656) were contaminated with Campylobacter (19).Molecular typing is an important tool in elucidating the diversity and transmission routes of Campylobacter isolates contaminating the food chain. In the United States, molecular analysis of Campylobacter spp. from poultry production and processing environments showed that many of the clones found within a flock are present in the final products, although the diversity of Campylobacter isolates in the final product was lower than that observed in the flock (22). Furthermore, numerous molecular epidemiological studies indicate that the genotypes of C. jejuni isolated from human cases overlap those of poultry origin (17, 47). Various molecular typing methods for the study of the population structure of Campylobacter are currently available (46). Among these, the multilocus sequence typing (MLST) approach is an emerging tool for research on the population structure and molecular epidemiology of Campylobacter. The technique is highly reproducible, portable, and easy to interpret, and results can be shared through a publicly accessible online database (31, 34). As such, MLST is becoming an important tool for studying the molecular epidemiology of Campylobacter in a global context. The accumulation of sequence typing data generated from different countries and settings could allow the creation of more-sophisticated models of the epidemiology and evolution of bacterial pathogens and the development of improved approaches for combating their spread (41).In Belgium, there is a paucity of information regarding the population structure of Campylobacter in the chicken meat supply. No population-based surveys have been conducted to investigate the molecular epidemiology of C. jejuni in chicken meat at points close to human consumption. In this study, MLST and pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) were used to characterize the diversity of, and clonal relationships among, 145 C. jejuni isolates from Belgian chicken meat preparations. In addition, we characterized the antimicrobial resistance in this collection and correlated it with C. jejuni genotypes.  相似文献   

17.
Campylobacter species are important organisms in both human and animal health. The identification of Campylobacter currently requires the growth of organisms from complex samples and biochemical identification. In many cases, the condition of the sample being tested and/or the fastidious nature of many Campylobacter species has limited the detection of campylobacters in a laboratory setting. To address this, we have designed a set of real-time quantitative PCR (qPCR) assays to detect and quantify 14 Campylobacter species, C. coli, C. concisus, C. curvus, C. fetus, C. gracilis, C. helveticus, C. hyointestinalis, C. jejuni, C. lari, C. mucosalis, C. rectus, C. showae, C. sputorum, and C. upsaliensis, directly from DNA extracted from feces. By use of a region of the cpn60 (also known as hsp60 or groEL) gene, which encodes the universally conserved 60-kDa chaperonin, species-specific assays were designed and validated. These assays were then employed to determine the prevalence of Campylobacter species in fecal samples from dogs. Fecal samples were found to contain detectable and quantifiable levels of C. fetus, C. gracilis, C. helveticus, C. jejuni, C. showae, and C. upsaliensis, with the majority of samples containing multiple Campylobacter species. This study represents the first report of C. fetus, C. gracilis, C. mucosalis, and C. showae detection in dogs and implicates dogs as a reservoir for these species. The qPCR assays described offer investigators a new tool to study many Campylobacter species in a culture-independent manner.Campylobacter species are important in both the medical and veterinary arenas. Currently, of the 19 Campylobacter species that have been classified (8; http://www.bacterio.cict.fr/), 10 or 11 species/subspecies have well-established associations with animal or human diseases, respectively (4, 20). Of significance is the role campylobacters play as the most common cause of enteric disease worldwide (34). Although most enteric disease is attributed to Campylobacter jejuni and C. coli, advances in cultivation techniques have revealed that other “unusual” campylobacters, such as C. upsaliensis, C. concisus, C. lari, and C. hyointestinalis, may be more commonly associated with gastrointestinal (GI) disease than was previously recognized (6, 17, 21, 27). Beyond being associated with enteric disease, C. rectus and C. gracilis have been directly associated with periodontal disease (24, 31, 32), and of note regarding livestock, C. fetus is an important venereal disease (2). Furthermore, a number of Campylobacter species appear to be part of the normal microbiota of healthy animals; for example, C. jejuni, C. coli, C. helveticus, C. upsaliensis, and C. lari are part of the normal microbiota of domestic dogs and cats (11, 15, 30).Quick and reliable identification and discrimination of Campylobacter species remain challenging. Culture from clinical specimens is often very sensitive but limited by several factors. While a number of different selective media have been specifically designed for Campylobacter species isolation, the fastidious nature and varied requirements of members of this genus mean that there is no single growth condition that is optimal for all species. Transport time from sampling to processing is also an important consideration, especially when sampling is done at some distance from the laboratory or a large number of samples are collected simultaneously. Prolonged time between sample collection and processing can reduce the success of Campylobacter isolation. Processing times as short as 4 h from the time of sample collection may be required for isolation of multiple Campylobacter species (15, 16).Routine identification of cultured Campylobacter species is based on biochemical profiling (29). This, however, has become increasingly problematic, as phenotypic profiles used to distinguish species, such as the hippurate hydrolysis assay to discriminate C. jejuni and C. coli, have become varied within species (29). There are also cases where multiple species share the same basic biochemical characteristics (such as C. mucosalis and C. concisus), leading to disputes over the definitive identities of isolated Campylobacter strains (9, 18, 19). The similar phenotypic and biochemical profiles of other closely related gram-negative curved rods, such as Arcobacter and Helicobacter spp., may further complicate the identification of Campylobacter isolates.To circumvent some of the limitations of biochemical profiling, various DNA-based identification methods have been developed. Methods with high discrimination potential for Campylobacter strains, like macrorestriction analysis of the whole genome by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis or of certain loci by restriction fragment length polymorphism, amplified fragment length polymorphism, and multilocus sequence typing, are available (20). However, these identification techniques are best suited for short- and long-term epidemiological studies in which the identity of an individual strain is of interest for source tracking or population phylogenies. These techniques also require considerable operator skill to generate reproducible patterns for comparison or the sequencing of multiple regions for identification. For targeted identification, a number of PCR strategies, both conventional and quantitative, based on the 16S rRNA gene or unspecified species- or subspecies-specific regions, have been designed (3, 22, 23, 26, 28). Unfortunately, strategies to date have focused on the detection of a single species or subspecies (26, 28), the genus as a whole (3), or a subset of species to the exclusion of others (22, 23). At the present, there is simply no way to quickly and reliably detect and identify many Campylobacter species.We have designed a set of real-time quantitative PCR (qPCR) assays to identify and quantify 14 Campylobacter species, C. coli, C. concisus, C. curvus, C. fetus, C. gracilis, C. helveticus, C. hyointestinalis, C. jejuni, C. lari, C. mucosalis, C. rectus, C. showae, C. sputorum, and C. upsaliensis, directly from DNA extracted from feces. These assays are based on the cpn60 gene, which encodes the universal 60-kDa chaperonin (also known as HSP60 or GroEL). The utility of this target has been demonstrated through its ability to identify and differentiate Campylobacter species from each other and from Helicobacter and Arcobacter species (12). This target is also supported by the reference database cpnDB (13; http://cpndb.cbr.nrc.ca), a curated collection of cpn60 sequences from thousands of type strains, reference strains, and clinical isolates. To validate and test our qPCR assays, we applied them in a survey of fecal samples from a population of dogs from a rural community of northern Saskatchewan, Canada.  相似文献   

18.
Human infection with Campylobacter jejuni is often associated with the consumption of foods that have been exposed to both chilling and high temperatures. Despite the public health importance of this pathogen, little is known about the effects of cold exposure on its ability to survive a subsequent heat challenge. This work examined the effect of rapid exposure to chilling, as would occur in poultry processing, on the heat resistance at 56°C of two C. jejuni strains, 11168 and 2097e48, and of Escherichia coli K-12. Unlike E. coli K-12, whose cold-exposed cells showed increased sensitivity to 56°C, such exposure had only a marginal effect on subsequent heat resistance in C. jejuni. This may be explained by the finding that during rapid chilling, unlike E. coli cells, C. jejuni cells are unable to alter their fatty acid composition and do not adapt to cold exposure. However, their unaltered fatty acid composition is more suited to survival when cells are exposed to high temperatures. This hypothesis is supported by the fact that in C. jejuni, the ratio of unsaturated to saturated fatty acids was not significantly different after cold exposure, but it was in E. coli. The low-temperature response of C. jejuni is very different from that of other food-borne pathogens, and this may contribute to its tolerance to further heat stresses.Campylobacter jejuni is the leading cause of bacterial diarrheal disease worldwide and is the most common antecedent to the peripheral neuropathies Guillain-Barré syndrome and Miller Fisher syndrome (32, 35). In England and Wales, there were ca. 47,000 Campylobacter cases reported in 2006, a probable 10-fold underestimate of the true incidence, as the World Health Organization calculates that ca. 1% of the population of Europe will be infected each year.Most Campylobacter infections are food borne, although contaminated water and environmental exposure have also been implicated (5). Currently, identified high-risk factors include the consumption of chicken, especially when undercooked (15), barbecued meat (2), and raw or improperly pasteurized milk (10, 22). In all of these cases, the infecting Campylobacter population would have been exposed to both low and high temperatures before being consumed.Despite their importance as human pathogens, little is known about how campylobacters cope with hostile conditions in the transmission chain from animals to humans. Campylobacter presents an interesting conundrum. It is generally considered to be fragile compared to other food-borne pathogens (7) but is recognized as the leading cause of food-borne disease, and vehicles are frequently foods that have received a degree of heat exposure.Although Campylobacter has been shown to be able to mount an acid tolerance response (28), it lacks a σ38 (RpoS) homologue (23) and cold shock proteins (17), which is thought to limit its ability to respond to hostile conditions common in the food chain. Despite lacking many of the classical bacterial stress responses, Campylobacter can survive for extended periods at low temperatures on key foods such as raw chicken (12). It is important to determine how the responses of Campylobacter to cold could affect its survival in other parts of the food chain. Does preexposure to cold make it more heat sensitive, as is the case for Escherichia coli and Salmonella spp. (20), or are its responses different, as work on one strain (27) suggests?The ability to deal with cold is inherently important to a wide range of mesophilic bacteria (29), and it is likely that some cold exposure tolerance mechanisms are highly conserved. One of the most important of these is a change in fatty acid composition, particularly in the outer membrane (36). Maintaining membrane homoviscosity is critical for continuing growth, and cellular membrane fatty acid composition is altered as the growth temperature changes (30). For example, during exposure to reduced temperatures, Salmonella spp. increase levels of unsaturated fatty acids (UFA), whereas Listeria spp. raise those of branched fatty acids in cellular membranes (33). Both responses increase membrane fluidity. Increased levels of cyclic fatty acids have been shown to have a role in raising the heat resistance of Pediococcus spp. (3) and to increase the stability of the membrane structure (9). Ulmer et al. (37) showed that as the growth temperature for Lactobacillus plantarum decreased, the proportion of UFA in cell membranes rose, leading to increased membrane fluidity and allowing the membrane to be maintained in a liquid gel state. A temperature-dependent shift in fatty acid production has been seen in E. coli. When the growth temperature is reduced, the enzyme activity of FabF increases, leading to an increase in the conversion of 16:1 fatty acids to 18:1 fatty acids (8, 11). Desaturation enhances the effects of the branched fatty acids produced during acclimation of bacterial cells to low temperatures (34).Although changes in fatty acid synthesis have been seen in Campylobacter coli upon a temperature downshift from 42 to 20°C (19), there is currently very little information on the effects of exposure to refrigeration conditions on the whole-cell fatty acid composition of C. jejuni. A study by Hazeleger et al. (17) compared changes in fatty acid composition in coccoid cells held at 4 or 12°C for 14 days with those in control spiral cells grown at 37°C for 24 h. They found that few significant changes in composition occurred at the lower temperatures, whereas at 25°C there were more marked changes in many fatty acids.The work reported here examines the effects of exposure to 6°C for 24 h on whole-cell fatty acid composition and heat resistance of C. jejuni to determine whether Campylobacter has a similar response to chill to the prototypic response of E. coli.  相似文献   

19.
Analysis of Lyme borreliosis (LB) spirochetes, using a novel multilocus sequence analysis scheme, revealed that OspA serotype 4 strains (a rodent-associated ecotype) of Borrelia garinii were sufficiently genetically distinct from bird-associated B. garinii strains to deserve species status. We suggest that OspA serotype 4 strains be raised to species status and named Borrelia bavariensis sp. nov. The rooted phylogenetic trees provide novel insights into the evolutionary history of LB spirochetes.Multilocus sequence typing (MLST) and multilocus sequence analysis (MLSA) have been shown to be powerful and pragmatic molecular methods for typing large numbers of microbial strains for population genetics studies, delineation of species, and assignment of strains to defined bacterial species (4, 13, 27, 40, 44). To date, MLST/MLSA schemes have been applied only to a few vector-borne microbial populations (1, 6, 30, 37, 40, 41, 47).Lyme borreliosis (LB) spirochetes comprise a diverse group of zoonotic bacteria which are transmitted among vertebrate hosts by ixodid (hard) ticks. The most common agents of human LB are Borrelia burgdorferi (sensu stricto), Borrelia afzelii, Borrelia garinii, Borrelia lusitaniae, and Borrelia spielmanii (7, 8, 12, 35). To date, 15 species have been named within the group of LB spirochetes (6, 31, 32, 37, 38, 41). While several of these LB species have been delineated using whole DNA-DNA hybridization (3, 20, 33), most ecological or epidemiological studies have been using single loci (5, 9-11, 29, 34, 36, 38, 42, 51, 53). Although some of these loci have been convenient for species assignment of strains or to address particular epidemiological questions, they may be unsuitable to resolve evolutionary relationships among LB species, because it is not possible to define any outgroup. For example, both the 5S-23S intergenic spacer (5S-23S IGS) and the gene encoding the outer surface protein A (ospA) are present only in LB spirochete genomes (36, 43). The advantage of using appropriate housekeeping genes of LB group spirochetes is that phylogenetic trees can be rooted with sequences of relapsing fever spirochetes. This renders the data amenable to detailed evolutionary studies of LB spirochetes.LB group spirochetes differ remarkably in their patterns and levels of host association, which are likely to affect their population structures (22, 24, 46, 48). Of the three main Eurasian Borrelia species, B. afzelii is adapted to rodents, whereas B. valaisiana and most strains of B. garinii are maintained by birds (12, 15, 16, 23, 26, 45). However, B. garinii OspA serotype 4 strains in Europe have been shown to be transmitted by rodents (17, 18) and, therefore, constitute a distinct ecotype within B. garinii. These strains have also been associated with high pathogenicity in humans, and their finer-scale geographical distribution seems highly focal (10, 34, 52, 53).In this study, we analyzed the intra- and interspecific phylogenetic relationships of B. burgdorferi, B. afzelii, B. garinii, B. valaisiana, B. lusitaniae, B. bissettii, and B. spielmanii by means of a novel MLSA scheme based on chromosomal housekeeping genes (30, 48).  相似文献   

20.
FlhF proteins are putative GTPases that are often necessary for one or more steps in flagellar organelle development in polarly flagellated bacteria. In Campylobacter jejuni, FlhF is required for σ54-dependent flagellar gene expression and flagellar biosynthesis, but how FlhF influences these processes is unknown. Furthermore, the GTPase activity of any FlhF protein and the requirement of this speculated activity for steps in flagellar biosynthesis remain uncharacterized. We show here that C. jejuni FlhF hydrolyzes GTP, indicating that these proteins are GTPases. C. jejuni mutants producing FlhF proteins with reduced GTPase activity were not severely defective for σ54-dependent flagellar gene expression, unlike a mutant lacking FlhF. Instead, these mutants had a propensity to lack flagella or produce flagella in improper numbers or at nonpolar locations, indicating that GTP hydrolysis by FlhF is required for proper flagellar biosynthesis. Additional studies focused on elucidating a possible role for FlhF in σ54-dependent flagellar gene expression were conducted. These studies revealed that FlhF does not influence production of or signaling between the flagellar export apparatus and the FlgSR two-component regulatory system to activate σ54. Instead, our data suggest that FlhF functions in an independent pathway that converges with or works downstream of the flagellar export apparatus-FlgSR pathway to influence σ54-dependent gene expression. This study provides corroborative biochemical and genetic analyses suggesting that different activities of the C. jejuni FlhF GTPase are required for distinct steps in flagellar gene expression and biosynthesis. Our findings are likely applicable to many polarly flagellated bacteria that utilize FlhF in flagellar biosynthesis processes.Flagellar biosynthesis in bacteria is a complex process that requires expression of more than 50 genes in a sequential manner to ensure that the encoded proteins are secreted and interact in a proper order to construct a flagellar organelle (8). Formation of a flagellum to impart swimming motility is often an essential determinant for many bacteria to infect hosts or reside in an environmental niche. As such, flagella and flagellar motility are required for Campylobacter jejuni to initiate and maintain a harmless intestinal colonization in many wild and agriculturally important animals (16, 17, 19, 35, 47, 49), which leads to large reservoirs of the bacterium in the environment and the human food supply (13). In addition, flagellar motility is essential for the bacterium to infect human hosts to cause a diarrheal disease, which can range from a mild, watery enteritis to a severe, bloody diarrheal syndrome (4). Due to its prevalence in nature and in the food supply, C. jejuni is a leading cause of enteritis in humans throughout the world (7).C. jejuni belongs to a subset of motile bacteria that produce polarly localized flagella, which includes important pathogens of humans, such as Helicobacter, Vibrio, and Pseudomonas species. These bacteria have some commonalities in mechanisms for flagellar gene expression and biosynthesis, such as using both alternative σ factors, σ28 and σ54, for expression of distinct sets of flagellar genes (1, 6, 9, 11, 18, 20-22, 26, 36, 40, 44, 45, 49). In addition, these bacteria produce the putative FlhF GTPase, which is required in each bacterium for at least one of the following: expression of a subset of flagellar genes, biosynthesis of flagella, or the polar placement of the flagella. For instance, FlhF is required for expression of some σ54- and σ28-dependent flagellar genes and for production of flagella in the classical biotype of Vibrio cholerae (10). However, V. cholerae flhF mutants of another biotype can produce a flagellum in a minority of cells, but the flagellum is at a lateral site (14). Similar lateral flagella were found in flhF mutants of Pseudomonas aeruginosa and Pseudomonas putida (34, 37). FlhF of Vibrio alginolyticus may also be involved in the polar formation of flagella and may possibly influence the number of flagella produced (28, 29). Demonstration that FlhF is polarly localized in some of these species and the fact that FlhF has been observed to assist the early flagellar MS ring protein, FliF, in localizing to the old pole in one biotype of V. cholerae give credence that FlhF may be involved in the polar placement of flagella in the respective organisms (14, 29, 34).Bioinformatic analysis indicates that the FlhF proteins belong to the SIMIBI class of NTP-binding proteins (30). More specifically, the GTPase domains of FlhF proteins are most similar to those of the signal recognition particle (SRP) pathway GTPases, such as Ffh and FtsY. Because of the homology of the GTPase domains, these three proteins may form a unique subset within the SIMIBI proteins. Whereas the GTPase activities of the interacting Ffh and FtsY proteins have been extensively characterized (32, 38, 39, 42), little is known about the GTP hydrolysis activity of FlhF. Structural determination of FlhF of Bacillus subtilis indicates that the potential GTPase activity of FlhF is likely varied relative to those of Ffh and FtsY (2). However, no biochemical analysis has been performed to verify or characterize the ability of an FlhF protein to hydrolyze GTP. As such, no studies have correlated the biochemical activity of FlhF in relation to GTP hydrolysis with the role that FlhF performs in flagellar gene expression or biosynthesis.Through previous work, we have delineated the regulatory cascades governing flagellar gene expression in C. jejuni. We have found that formation of the flagellar export apparatus (FEA), a multiprotein inner membrane complex (consisting of the proteins FlhA, FlhB, FliF, FliO, FliP, FliQ, and FliR) that secretes most of the flagellar proteins out of the cytoplasm to form the flagellum, is required to activate the FlgS sensor kinase to begin a phosphorelay to the cognate FlgR response regulator (23, 24). Once activated by phosphorylation, FlgR likely interacts with σ54 in RNA polymerase to initiate expression of many flagellar genes encoding components of the flagellar basal body, rod, and hook (20, 24). After formation of the hook, flaA, encoding the major flagellin, is expressed via σ28 and RNA polymerase to generate the flagellar filament and complete flagellar biosynthesis (6, 18, 20, 21, 49). In two separate genetic analyses, we found that flhF mutants of C. jejuni are nonmotile and show a more than 10-fold reduction in expression of σ54-dependent flagellar genes, indicating that FlhF is required for both flagellar gene expression and biosynthesis (20). However, it is unclear how FlhF influences expression of σ54-dependent flagellar genes. Furthermore, it is unknown if the GTPase activity of FlhF is required for flagellar gene expression or biosynthesis in C. jejuni.We have performed experiments to determine that C. jejuni FlhF specifically hydrolyzes GTP, confirming that FlhF is a GTPase. Whereas the FlhF protein is required for motility, flagellar biosynthesis, and expression of σ54-dependent flagellar genes, the GTPase activity of the protein significantly influences only proper biosynthesis of flagella. These results suggest that multiple biochemical activities of FlhF (including GTPase activity and likely other, as yet uncharacterized activities mediated by other domains) are required at distinct steps in flagellar gene expression and biosynthesis. In addition, we provide biochemical and genetic evidence that FlhF likely functions in a pathway separate from the FEA-FlgSR pathway in C. jejuni to influence expression of σ54-dependent flagellar genes. This study provides corroborative genetic and biochemical analysis of FlhF to indicate that FlhF has multiple inherent activities that function at different steps in development of the flagellar organelle, which may be applicable to many polarly flagellated bacteria.  相似文献   

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