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Caenorhabditis elegans is a validated model to study bacterial pathogenicity. We report that Yersinia enterocolitica strains W22703 (biovar 2, serovar O:9) and WA314 (biovar 1B, serovar O:8) kill C. elegans when feeding on the pathogens for at least 15 min before transfer to the feeding strain Escherichia coli OP50. The killing by Yersinia enterocolitica requires viable bacteria and, in contrast to that by Yersinia pestis and Yersinia pseudotuberculosis strains, is biofilm independent. The deletion of tcaA encoding an insecticidal toxin resulted in an OP50-like life span of C. elegans, indicating an essential role of TcaA in the nematocidal activity of Y. enterocolitica. TcaA alone is not sufficient for nematocidal activity because E. coli DH5α overexpressing TcaA did not result in a reduced C. elegans life span. Spatial-temporal analysis of C. elegans infected with green fluorescent protein-labeled Y. enterocolitica strains showed that Y. enterocolitica colonizes the nematode intestine, leading to an extreme expansion of the intestinal lumen. By low-dose infection with W22703 or DH5α followed by transfer to E. coli OP50, proliferation of Y. enterocolitica, but not E. coli, in the intestinal lumen of the nematode was observed. The titer of W22703 cells within the worm increased to over 106 per worm 4 days after infection while a significantly lower number of a tcaA knockout mutant was recovered. A strong expression of tcaA was observed during the first 5 days of infection. Y. enterocolitica WA314 (biovar 1B, serovar O:8) mutant strains lacking the yadA, inv, yopE, and irp1 genes known to be important for virulence in mammals were not attenuated or only slightly attenuated in their toxicity toward the nematode, suggesting that these factors do not play a significant role in the colonization and persistence of this pathogen in nematodes. In summary, this study supports the hypothesis that C. elegans is a natural host and nutrient source of Y. enterocolitica.Yersinia enterocolitica belongs to the family of Enterobacteriaceae and is a psychrotolerant human pathogen that causes gastrointestinal syndromes ranging from acute enteritis to mesenteric lymphadenitis (5). It infects a number of mammals, and swine was identified as a major source for human infection (6). A multiphasic life cycle, which comprises a free-living phase and several host-associated phases, including cold-blooded and warm-blooded hosts, appears to be characteristic for biovars 1B and 2 to 5 of Y. enterocolitica (7, 24).Nonmammalian host organisms including Dictyostelium discoideum, Drosophila melanogaster, or Caenorhabditis elegans are increasingly used to study host-pathogen interactions (16, 26). Due to the obvious parallels between the mammalian and invertebrate defense mechanisms, it has been suggested that the bacteria-invertebrate interaction has shaped the evolution of microbial pathogenicity (53). Several human pathogens including Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria infect and kill the soil nematode C. elegans when they are supplied as a nutrient source (42). For example, Streptococcus pneumoniae (4), Listeria monocytogenes (50), extraintestinal Escherichia coli (15), and Staphylococcus aureus (43) but not Bacillus subtilis have been shown to kill the nematode. Upon infection of C. elegans with Enterococcus faecalis, Gram-positive virulence-related factors as well as putative antimicrobials have been identified (20, 35). The extensive conservation in virulence mechanisms directed against invertebrates as well as mammals was demonstrated using a screen with Pseudomonas aeruginosa (30). In this study, 10 of 13 genes whose knockout attenuated the nematode killing were also required for full virulence in a mouse model, confirming the suitability of the C. elegans model to study bacterial pathogenicity. C. elegans is also colonized by Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium (S. Typhimurium). This process requires Salmonella virulence factors and was used to study the innate immune response of the nematode (1, 2, 49).The effect of pathogenic Yersinia spp. on C. elegans has also been investigated. It could be demonstrated that both Yersinia pestis and Yersinia pseudotuberculosis block food intake by creating a biofilm around the worm''s mouth (13, 27). This biofilm formation requires the hemin storage locus (hms) and has been suggested to be responsible for the blockage of the digestive tract following uptake by fleas, thus acting as a bacterial defense against predation by invertebrates. In a study with 40 Y. pseudotuberculosis strains, one-quarter of them caused an infection of C. elegans by biofilm formation on the worm head (27). In contrast, a similar effect was not observed following nematode infection with 15 Y. enterocolitica strains. Using a Y. pestis strain lacking the hms genes, it could be demonstrated that this mutant can infect and kill the nematode by a biofilm-independent mechanism that includes the accumulation of Y. pestis in the intestine of the worm (47). This pathogenesis model was applied to show that putative virulence factors such as YapH, OmpT, or a metalloprotease, Y3857, but not the virulence plasmids pCD1 and pPCP1, are required for Y. pestis virulence in C. elegans. Six yet unknown genes required for full virulence in C. elegans were also identified, and one of them appeared to be a virulence factor in the mouse infection model.C. elegans has not been used to study the pathogenicity properties of Y. enterocolitica, mainly due to the fact that many of its virulence factors are upregulated at 37°C in comparison to growth at lower temperatures while C. elegans cannot be cultivated at temperatures above 25°C. In this study, we examined for the first time the infection of C. elegans by Y. enterocolitica strains, demonstrating that this pathogen colonizes and kills C. elegans and that the insecticidal toxin TcaA, which is expressed only at ambient temperature, is required for full nematocidal activity.  相似文献   

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In Escherichia coli strains carrying null mutations in either the dnaK or dnaJ genes, the late stages of 30S and 50S ribosomal subunit biogenesis are slowed down in a temperature‐dependent manner. At high temperature (44°C), 32S and 45S particles (precursors to 50S subunits) and 21S particles (precursors to 30S subunits) accumulate. The latter are shown by 3′5′ rapid amplification of cDNA ends analysis to contain unprocessed or partially processed 16S ribosomal RNA at the 5′ end, but the 3′ end was never processed. This implies that maturation of 16S ribosomal RNA starts at the 5′‐terminus, and that the 3′‐terminus is only trimmed at a later step. At normal temperatures (30°C?37°C), ribosome assembly in both mutants is not arrested but is significantly delayed, as shown by pulse‐chase analysis. Assembly defects are partially compensated by an overexpression of other heat‐shock proteins, which occurs in the absence of their negative regulator DnaK, or by a plasmid‐driven overexpression of GroES/GroEL, suggesting the involvement of a network of chaperones in ribosome biogenesis.  相似文献   

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Vernalization is an acceleration of flowering in response to chilling, and is normally studied in the laboratory at near‐freezing (2–4 °C) temperatures. Many vernalization‐requiring species, such as Arabidopsis thaliana, are found in a range of habitats with varying winter temperatures. Natural variation in the temperature range that elicits a vernalization response in Arabidopsis has not been fully explored. We characterized the effect of intermediate temperatures (7–19 °C) on 15 accessions and the well‐studied reference line Col‐FRI. Although progressively warmer temperatures are gradually less effective at activating expression of the vernalization‐specific gene VERNALIZATION‐INSENSITIVE 3 (VIN3) and in accelerating flowering, there is substantial natural variation in the upper threshold (Tmax) of the flowering‐time response. VIN3 is required for the Tmax (13 °C) response of Col‐FRI. Surprisingly, even 16 °C treatment caused induction of VIN3 in six tested lines, despite the ineffectiveness of this temperature in accelerating flowering for two of them. Finally, we present evidence that mild acceleration of flowering by 19 °C exposure may counterbalance the flowering time delay caused by non‐inductive photoperiods in at least one accession, creating an appearance of photoperiod insensitivity.  相似文献   

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Yersinia enterocolitica is a facultative intracellular parasite, displaying the ability to grow saprophytically or invade and persist intracellularly in the mammalian reticuloendothelial system. The transition between such diverse environments requires the co-ordinated regulation of specific sets of genes on both the chromosome and virulence plasmid. Temperature has a profound pleiotropic effect on gene expression and phenotypically promotes alterations in cell morphology, outer-membrane protein synthesis, urease production, lipopolysaccharide synthesis, motility, and synthesis of genes involved in invasion of euKaryotic host cells. By examining thermoregulated flagella biosynthesis, we have determined that motility is repressed at 25° C (permissive temperature) with subinhibitory concentrations of novobiocin. These conditions also induce virulence gene expression suggesting novobiocin addition stimulates, at least partially, a high-temperature environment. Furthermore, temperature-shift experiments, using Y. enterocolitica containing pACYC184 as a reporter plasmid, indicate that thermo-induced alterations of DNA supercoiling coincide with temperature-induced phenotypic changes. A class of putative DNA gyrase mutant (novobiocin resistant) likewise demonstrates the 37° C phenotype when cultured at 25°C; it is non-motile, urease negative, calcium growth dependent, and positive for Yop expression. These results support a model implicating DNA topology as a contributing factor of Y. enterocolitica thermoregulation.  相似文献   

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Functional response of a solitary, larval-pupal endoparasitoid of Liriomyza leafminers, Ganaspidium utilis Beardsley, was estimated on Liriomyza trifolii Burgess at three temperatures (17℃, 25℃, 29℃ ) and host densities. A type Ⅱ random parasitoid equation (RPE) was used to estimate instantaneous search rate and handling time. The instantaneous search rate increased as temperature increased. All of the RPE regressions obtained for functional response of G. utilis at different temperatures were significant (P〈0.01). The slope of RPE regression lines was lower across the temperatures. At 29±2℃, the maximum number of larvae parasitized was 7.8 per day. It decreased to 7.2 larvae parasitized at 25±2℃. At 17±2℃, no significant increment of parasitization was observed due to the host density increments. The estimated handling time was lowest at 17±2℃ and highest at 25 ± 2℃, respectively. The ability of G. utilis to find and parasitize L. trifolii over a wide range of temperatures makes them a good candidate for biological control of Liriomyza leafminers.  相似文献   

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Overexpression of bcl‐xL in recombinant Chinese hamster ovary (rCHO) cells has been known to suppress apoptotic cell death and thereby extend culture longevity during batch culture. However, its effect on specific productivity (q) of rCHO cells is controversial. This study attempts to investigate the effect of bcl‐xL overexpression on q of rCHO cells producing erythropoietin (EPO). To regulate the bcl‐xL expression level, the Tet‐off system was introduced in rCHO cells producing EPO (EPO‐off‐bcl‐xL). The bcl‐xL expression level was tightly controlled by doxycycline concentration. To evaluate the effect of bcl‐xL overexpression on specific EPO productivity (qEPO) at different levels, EPO‐off‐bcl‐xL cells were cultivated at the two different culture temperatures, 33°C and 37°C. The qEPO at 33°C and 37°C in the presence of 100 ng/mL doxycycline (without bcl‐xL overexpression) were 4.89 ± 0.21 and 3.18 ± 0.06 μg/106cells/day, respectively. In the absence of doxycycline, bcl‐xL overexpression did not affect qEPO significantly, regardless of the culture temperature, though it extended the culture longevity. Taken together, bcl‐xL overexpression showed no significant effect on the qEPO of rCHO cells grown at 33°C and 37°C. © 2009 American Institute of Chemical Engineers Biotechnol. Prog., 2009  相似文献   

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Restrictions to photosynthesis can limit plant growth at high temperature in a variety of ways. In addition to increasing photorespiration, moderately high temperatures (35–42 °C) can cause direct injury to the photosynthetic apparatus. Both carbon metabolism and thylakoid reactions have been suggested as the primary site of injury at these temperatures. In the present study this issue was addressed by first characterizing leaf temperature dynamics in Pima cotton (Gossypium barbadense) grown under irrigation in the US desert south‐west. It was found that cotton leaves repeatedly reached temperatures above 40 °C and could fluctuate as much as 8 or 10 °C in a matter of seconds. Laboratory studies revealed a maximum photosynthetic rate at 30–33 °C that declined by 22% at 45 °C. The majority of the inhibition persisted upon return to 30 °C. The mechanism of this limitation was assessed by measuring the response of photosynthesis to CO2 in the laboratory. The first time a cotton leaf (grown at 30 °C) was exposed to 45 °C, photosynthetic electron transport was stimulated (at high CO2) because of an increased flux through the photorespiratory pathway. However, upon cooling back to 30 °C, photosynthetic electron transport was inhibited and fell substantially below the level measured before the heat treatment. In the field, the response of assimilation (A) to various internal levels of CO2 (Ci) revealed that photosynthesis was limited by ribulose‐1,5‐bisphosphate (RuBP) regeneration at normal levels of CO2 (presumably because of limitations in thylakoid reactions needed to support RuBP regeneration). There was no evidence of a ribulose‐1,5‐bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco) limitation at air levels of CO2 and at no point on any of 30 ACi curves measured on leaves at temperatures from 28 to 39 °C was RuBP regeneration capacity measured to be in substantial excess of the capacity of Rubisco to use RuBP. It is therefore concluded that photosynthesis in field‐grown Pima cotton leaves is functionally limited by photosynthetic electron transport and RuBP regeneration capacity, not Rubisco activity.  相似文献   

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The mechanisms controlling the photosynthetic performance of C4 plants at low temperature were investigated using ecotypes of Bouteloua gracilis Lag. from high (3000 m) and low (1500 m) elevation sites in the Rocky Mountains of Colorado. Plants were grown in controlled‐environment cabinets at a photon flux density of 700 μ mol m?2 s?1 and day/night temperatures of 26/16 °C or 14/7 °C. The thermal response of the net CO2 assimilation rate (A) was evaluated using leaf gas‐exchange analysis and activity assays of ribulose‐1,5‐bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco), phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase (PEPCase) and pyruvate,orthophosphate dikinase (PPDK). In both ecotypes, a reduction in measurement temperature caused the CO2‐saturated rate of photosynthesis to decline to a greater degree than the initial slope of A versus the intercellular CO2 response, thereby reducing the photosynthetic CO2 saturation point. As a consequence, A in normal air was CO2‐saturated at sub‐optimal temperatures. Ecotypic variation was low when grown at 26/16 °C, with the major difference between the ecotypes being that the low‐elevation plants had higher A; however, the ecotypes responded differently when grown at cool temperature. At temperatures below the thermal optimum, A in high‐elevation plants grown at 14/7 °C was enhanced relative to plants grown at 26/16 °C, while A in low‐elevation plants grown at 14/7 °C was reduced compared to 26/16 °C‐grown plants. Photoinhibition at low growth temperature was minor in both ecotypes as indicated by small reductions in dark‐adapted Fv/Fm. In both ecotypes, the activity of Rubisco was equivalent to A below 17 °C but well in excess of A above 25 °C. Activities of PEPCase and PPDK responded to temperature in a similar proportion relative to Rubisco, and showed no evidence for dissociation that would cause them to become principal limitations at low temperature. Because of the similar temperature response of Rubisco and A, we propose that Rubisco is a major limitation on C4 photosynthesis in B. gracilis below 17 °C. Based on these results and for theoretical reasons associated with how C4 plants use Rubisco, we further suggest that Rubisco capacity may be a widespread limitation upon C4 photosynthesis at low temperature.  相似文献   

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Aims: The potential effect of in‐premise plumbing temperatures (24, 32, 37 and 41°C) on the growth of five different Legionella pneumophila strains within free‐living amoebae (Acanthamoeba polyphaga, Hartmannella vermiformis and Naegleria fowleri) was examined. Methods and Results: Compared with controls that actively fed on Escherichia coli prey, when Leg. pneumophila was used as prey, strains Lp02 and Bloomington‐2 increased in growth at 30, 32 and 37°C while strains Philadelphia‐1 and Chicago 2 did not grow at any temperature within A. polyphaga. Strains Lp02, Bloomington‐2 and Dallas 1E did not proliferate in the presence of H. vermiformis nor did strain Philadelphia‐1 in the presence of N. fowleri. Yet, strain Bloomington‐2 grew at all temperatures examined within N. fowleri, while strain Lp02 proliferated at all temperatures except 41°C. More intriguing, strain Chicago 2 only grew at 32°C within H. vermiformis and N. fowleri suggesting a limited temperature growth range for this strain. Conclusions: Identifying the presence of pathogenic legionellae may require the use of multiple host amoebae and incubation temperatures. Significance and Impact of the Study: Temperature conditions and species of amoeba host supported in drinking water appear to be important for the selection of human‐pathogenic legionellae and point to future research required to better understand Legionella ecology.  相似文献   

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Unformulated conidia of Beauveria bassiana were stored at five different temperatures (0°, 10°, 20°, 30° and 40°C) at six different relative humidities (RH) (0, 33, 53, 75, 85 and 98%). Conidial viabilities and virulence against third instar larvae of Helicoverpa armigera were determined over a 24‐month period. Conidia survived longest at lower temperatures (0–20°C) and lower RH levels (0–53% RH). At higher temperatures (30–40°C) conidia did not survive. When the temperature was decreased from 30°C to 0°C, at nearly all RH levels the longevity of conidia increased. Conidia remained virulent for third instar larvae of H. armigera under favourable storage conditions for 24 months.  相似文献   

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Development of powdery mildew Erysiphe (sect. Microsphaera) pulchra in dogwood (Cornus florida) was assessed over a 5‐year period (1996–2000). Variations in the timing of initial infection, disease severity, ascocarp formation, and primary inoculum density were evaluated. Ascocarps formed late in the growing season (September‐November) when relatively low temperatures (< 27°C) persisted for at least 2 weeks, but ascocarp abundance was not influenced by disease severity. Studies conducted in a controlled environment showed that low temperatures triggered ascocarp formation and neither day length nor host plant age affected ascocarp formation. Ascocarps formed within 12–14 days at 18°C/ 10°C (day/night) and 23°C/15°C, but required 25 days at 26°C/18°C; no ascocarps formed at 28°C/ 20°C. Because ascocarps are an important source of primary inoculum for dogwood powdery mildew, ascocarp survival was evaluated in a 2‐year study (1998–2000). 60–80% of mature, dark‐coloured ascocarps survived at ‐10°C and ‐20°C and maintained viable spores for 4 months, but only 4–12% of partially developed, light brown ascocarps survived at ‐10°C and ‐20°C in the first experiment and only 30–40% survived in the second experiment. Immature ascocarp initials (cream‐yellow in colour) withered and disintegrated at all temperatures (24°C/20°C, 4°C, ‐10°C, and ‐20°C). Because ascocarps need time to mature, the timing of ascocarp initiation affects ascocarp maturity and thus winter survival and primary inoculum density. The evaluation of spring inoculum dispersal to spore traps and trap plants in 1999 and 2000 showed that rainfall patterns in early spring influenced primary inoculum and thus the timing of initial infection.  相似文献   

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Monoclonal antibodies against Yersinia enterocolitica were produced by fusion of NS‐1 mouse myeloma cells with spleen cells of ICR mice immunized with heat‐killed and heat‐killed plus SDS‐mercaptoethanol treated forms of Y. enterocolitica ATCC 27729 alone or mixed with Y. enterocolitica MU. The twenty‐five MAbs obtained from five fusions were divided into nine groups according to their specificities to different bacterial strains and species, as determined by dot blotting. The first five groups of MAbs were specific only to Y. enterocolitica, but did not recognize all of the isolates tested. MAbs in groups 6 and 7 reacted with all isolates of Y. enterocolitica tested but showed cross‐reaction with some Yersinia spp. and Edwardsiella tarda, especially in the case of group 7. MAbs in groups 8 and 9 reacted with all isolates of Y. enterocolitica and Yersinia spp., as well as other Gram‐negative bacteria that belong to the family Enterobacteriaceae. These MAbs recognized Y. enterocolitica antigens with apparent molecular weights ranging from 10 – 43 kDa by Western blotting, and could detect Y. enterocolitica from ~103– 105 colony forming units (CFUs) by dot blotting. The hybridoma clone YE38 was selected for detection of Y. enterocolitica in pork samples which had been artificially‐contaminated by inoculation with Y. enterocolitica ATCC 27729 at concentrations of ~104– 106 CFUs/g and incubation in peptone sorbitol bile broth at 4°C. Samples were collected and applied on a nitrocellulose membrane for dot blotting with trypticase soy and cefsulodin‐Irgasan‐novobiocin agars. After 48 hr of incubation, the detection limit was ~102– 103 CFU/g by dot blotting.  相似文献   

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State III respiration rates were measured in mitochondria isolated from hearts of Antarctic notothenioid fishes that differ in the expression of hemoglobin (Hb) and myoglobin (Mb). Respiration rates were measured at temperatures between 2 and 40°C in Gobionotothen gibberifrons (+Hb/+Mb), Chaenocephalus aceratus (–Hb/–Mb) and Chionodraco rastrospinosus (–Hb/+Mb). Blood osmolarity was measured in all three species and physiological buffers prepared for isolating mitochondria and measuring respiration rates. Respiration rates were higher in mitochondria from G. gibberifrons compared to those from C. aceratus at 2°C, but were similar among all species at temperatures between 10 and 26°C. Respiration rates were significantly lower in icefishes at 35 and 40°C compared to G. gibberifrons. The respiratory control ratio of isolated mitochondria was lower in C. aceratus compared to G. gibberifrons at all temperatures below 35°C. At 35 and 40°C, mitochondria were uncoupled in all species. The Arrhenius break temperature of state III respiration was similar among all three species (30.5 ± 0.9°C) and higher than values previously reported for Antarctic notothenioids, likely due to the higher osmolarity of buffers used in this study. These results suggest that differences in mitochondrial structure, correlated with the expression of oxygen-binding proteins, minimally impact mitochondrial function.  相似文献   

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