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1.
The outcome of Salmonella infection in the mammalian host favors whoever succeeds best in disturbing the equilibrium between coordinate expression of bacterial (virulence) genes and host defense mechanisms. Intracellular persistence in host cells is critical for pathogenesis and disease, because Salmonella typhimurium strains defective in this property are avirulent. We examined whether similar host defense mechanisms are required for growth control of two S. typhimurium mutant strains. Salmonella pathogenicity island 2 (SPI2) and virulence plasmid-cured Salmonella mutants display similar virulence phenotypes in immunocompetent mice, yet their gene loci participate in independent virulence strategies. We determined the role of TNF-alpha and IFN-gamma as well as different T cell populations in infection with these Salmonella strains. After systemic infection, IFN-gamma was essential for growth restriction of plasmid-cured S. typhimurium, while SPI2 mutant infections were controlled in the absence of IFN-gamma. TNFRp55-deficiency restored systemic virulence to both Salmonella mutants. After oral inoculation, control of plasmid-cured bacteria substantially relied on both IFN-gamma and TNF-alpha signaling while control of SPI2 mutants did not. However, for both mutants, ultimate clearance of bacteria from infected mice depended on alphabeta T cells.  相似文献   

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Sensing and responding to environmental cues is a fundamental characteristic of bacterial physiology and virulence. Here we identify polyamines as novel environmental signals essential for virulence of Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium, a major intracellular pathogen and a model organism for studying typhoid fever. Central to its virulence are two major virulence loci Salmonella Pathogenicity Island 1 and 2 (SPI1 and SPI2). SPI1 promotes invasion of epithelial cells, whereas SPI2 enables S. Typhimurium to survive and proliferate within specialized compartments inside host cells. In this study, we show that an S. Typhimurium polyamine mutant is defective for invasion, intracellular survival, killing of the nematode Caenorhabditis elegans and systemic infection of the mouse model of typhoid fever. Virulence of the mutant could be restored by genetic complementation, and invasion and intracellular survival could, as well, be complemented by the addition of exogenous putrescine and spermidine to the bacterial cultures prior to infection. Interestingly, intracellular survival of the polyamine mutant was significantly enhanced above the wild type level by the addition of exogenous putrescine and spermidine to the bacterial cultures prior to infection, indicating that these polyamines function as an environmental signal that primes S. Typhimurium for intracellular survival. Accordingly, experiments addressed at elucidating the roles of these polyamines in infection revealed that expression of genes from both of the major virulence loci SPI1 and SPI2 responded to exogenous polyamines and was reduced in the polyamine mutant. Together our data demonstrate that putrescine and spermidine play a critical role in controlling virulence in S. Typhimurium most likely through stimulation of expression of essential virulence loci. Moreover, our data implicate these polyamines as key signals in S. Typhimurium virulence.  相似文献   

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The type III secretion system (T3SS) encoded by Salmonella Pathogenicity Island 2 (SPI2) is essential for virulence and intracellular proliferation of Salmonella enterica. We have previously identified SPI2-encoded proteins that are secreted and function as a translocon for the injection of effector proteins. Here, we describe the formation of a novel SPI2-dependent appendage structure in vitro as well as on the surface of bacteria that reside inside a vacuole of infected host cells. In contrast to the T3SS of other pathogens, the translocon encoded by SPI2 is only present singly or in few copies at one pole of the bacterial cell. Under in vitro conditions, appendages are composed of a filamentous needle-like structure with a diameter of 10 nm that was sheathed with secreted protein. The formation of the appendage in vitro is dependent on acidic media conditions. We analyzed SPI2-encoded appendages in infected cells and observed that acidic vacuolar pH was not required for induction of SPI2 gene expression, but was essential for the assembly of these structures and their function as translocon for delivery of effector proteins.  相似文献   

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Two large virulence loci encoding type III secretion systems are present on the chromosome of Salmonella typhimurium. Salmonella pathogenicity island 2 (SPI2) is important for the survival of S. typhimurium in host organs and forms an insertion of about 40 kb at the tRNA(Val) gene. However, several indications suggested that SPI2 was not the result of a single event of horizontal gene transfer. We characterized the portion of SPI2 towards the 30 cs boundary and performed mutational analysis to investigate the contribution of this region to S. enterica virulence. This analysis indicates that SPI2 may be composed of at least two different genetic elements. About 15 kb of the 40 kb of SPI2 contain genes without a significant contribution to systemic infections in the model of murine salmonellosis. Our study allowed us to define genes in SPI2 important for virulence further and indicated that this locus has a complex mosaic structure.  相似文献   

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Salmonella typhimurium translocates effector proteins into host cells via the SPI1 type III secretion system to induce responses such as membrane ruffling and internalization by non-phagocytic cells. Activation of the host cellular RhoGTPase Cdc42 is thought to be a key event during internalization. The translocated Salmonella protein SopE is an activator for Cdc42. Because SopE is absent from most S. typhimurium strains it remains unclear whether all S. typhimurium strains rely on activation of Cdc42 to invade host cells. We have identified SopE2, a translocated effector protein common to all S. typhimurium strains. SopE2 is a guanine nucleotide exchange factor for Cdc42 and shows 69% sequence similarity to SopE. Analysis of S. typhimurium mutants demonstrated that SopE2 plays a role in recruitment of the actin-nucleating Arp2/3 complex to the membrane ruffles and in efficient host cell invasion. Transfection experiments showed that SopE2 is sufficient to activate host cellular Cdc42, to recruit the actin-nucleating Arp2/3 complex and to induce actin cytoskeletal rearrangements and internalization. In conclusion, as a result of SopE2 all S. typhimurium strains tested have the capacity to activate Cdc42 signalling inside host cells which is important to ensure efficient entry.  相似文献   

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The facultative intracellular pathogen Salmonella enterica has evolved strategies to modify its fate inside host cells. One key virulence factor for the intracellular pathogenesis is the type III secretion system encoded by Salmonella Pathogenicity Island 2 (SPI2). We have previously described SPI2-encoded SseF and SseG as effector proteins that are translocated by intracellular Salmonella . Detailed analysis of the subcellular localization of SseF and SseG within the host cell indicated that these effector proteins are associated with endosomal membranes as well as with microtubules. Specific association with microtubules was observed after translocation by intracellular Salmonella as well as after expression by transfection vectors. In epithelial cells infected with Salmonella , both SseF and SseG are required for the aggregation of endosomal compartments along microtubules and to induce the formation of massive bundles of microtubules. These observations demonstrate that SPI2 effectors interfere with the microtubule cytoskeleton and suggest that microtubule-dependent host cell functions such as vesicle transport or organelle positioning are altered by intracellular Salmonella .  相似文献   

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Salmonella typhimurium, which causes gastroenteritis in calves and humans as well as a typhoid-like disease in mice, uses numerous virulence factors to infect its hosts. Genes encoding these factors are regulated by many environmental conditions and regulatory pathways in vitro. Many virulence genes are specifically induced at particular sites during infection or in cultured host cells. The complex regulation of virulence genes observed in vitro may be necessary to restrict their expression to specific locations within the host. In vitro and in vivo studies provide clues about how virulence genes might be regulated in vivo. Future studies must assess the actual environmental signals and regulators that modulate each virulence gene in vivo and determine how multiple regulatory pathways are integrated to co-ordinate the appropriate expression of virulence factors at specific sites in vivo.  相似文献   

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Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium (also known as Salmonella typhimurium) is a facultative intracellular pathogen that causes approximately 8,000 reported cases of acute gastroenteritis and diarrhea each year in the United States. Although many successful physiological, biochemical, and genetic approaches have been taken to determine the key virulence determinants encoded by this organism, the sheer number of uncharacterized reading frames observed within the S. enterica genome suggests that many more virulence factors remain to be discovered. We used a liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry-based "bottom-up" proteomic approach to generate a more complete picture of the gene products that S. typhimurium synthesizes under typical laboratory conditions as well as in culture media that are known to induce expression of virulence genes. When grown to logarithmic phase in rich medium, S. typhimurium is known to express many genes that are required for invasion of epithelial cells. Conversely stationary phase cultures of S. typhimurium express genes that are needed for both systemic infection and growth within infected macrophages. Lastly bacteria grown in an acidic, magnesium-depleted minimal medium (MgM) designed to mimic the phagocytic vacuole have been shown to up-regulate virulence gene expression. Initial comparisons of protein abundances from bacteria grown under each of these conditions indicated that the majority of proteins do not change significantly. However, we observed subsets of proteins whose expression was largely restricted to one of the three culture conditions. For example, cells grown in MgM had a higher abundance of Mg(2+) transport proteins than found in other growth conditions. A second more virulent S. typhimurium strain (14028) was also cultured under these same growth conditions, and the results were directly compared with those obtained for strain LT2. This comparison offered a unique opportunity to contrast protein populations in these closely related bacteria. Among a number of proteins displaying a higher abundance in strain 14028 were the products of the pdu operon, which encodes enzymes required for propanediol utilization. These pdu operon proteins were validated in culture and during macrophage infection. Our work provides further support for earlier observations that suggest pdu gene expression contributes to S. typhimurium pathogenesis.  相似文献   

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Toll-like receptors (TLRs) contribute to host resistance to microbial pathogens and can drive the evolution of virulence mechanisms. We have examined the relationship between host resistance and pathogen virulence using mice with a functional allele of the nramp-1 gene and lacking combinations of TLRs. Mice deficient in both TLR2 and TLR4 were highly susceptible to the intracellular bacterial pathogen Salmonella typhimurium, consistent with reduced innate immune function. However, mice lacking additional TLRs involved in S. typhimurium recognition were less susceptible to infection. In these TLR-deficient cells, bacteria failed to upregulate Salmonella pathogenicity island 2 (SPI-2) genes and did not form a replicative compartment. We demonstrate that TLR signaling enhances the rate of acidification of the Salmonella-containing phagosome, and inhibition of this acidification prevents SPI-2 induction. Our results indicate that S. typhimurium requires cues from the innate immune system to regulate virulence genes necessary for intracellular survival, growth, and systemic infection.  相似文献   

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Type III protein secretion is a common virulence determinant in Gram-negative bacteria and the genetic information is often clustered in pathogenicity islands or on virulence plasmids. We have analyzed the type III secretion system encoded by Salmonella Pathogenicity Island 2 (SPI2) that is indispensable for systemic disease of Salmonella enterica serotype Typhimurium (S. Typhimurium) in mice. Since the low abundance of this secretion system restricted direct analysis by proteomic approaches, several putative proteins were expressed as recombinant products and analyzed by two-dimensional electrophoresis. The map obtained for SPI2 encoded proteins was correlated to the expression pattern of S. Typhimurium. The latter was compared to the proteins induced by SsrAB, the two-component system regulating SPI2 gene expression. Our results exemplify that recombinant expression is a complementary tool for analysis of low abundant proteins or membrane proteins. This approach contributes to the characterization of these proteins by subcellular fractionation. Furthermore, we show that pulse labeling was necessary to analyze growth phase regulated SPI2 proteins that might not be otherwise detectable.  相似文献   

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Proteomics analysis of the causative agent of typhoid fever   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Typhoid fever is a potentially fatal disease caused by the bacterial pathogen Salmonella enterica serotype Typhi ( S. typhi). S. typhi infection is a complex process that involves numerous bacterially encoded virulence determinants, and these are thought to confer both stringent human host specificity and a high mortality rate. In the present study, we used a liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS)-based proteomics strategy to investigate the proteome of logarithmic, stationary phase, and low pH/low magnesium (MgM) S. typhi cultures. This represents the first large-scale comprehensive characterization of the S. typhi proteome. Our analysis identified a total of 2066 S. typhi proteins. In an effort to identify putative S. typhi-specific virulence factors, we then compared our S. typhi results to those obtained in a previously published study of the S. typhimurium proteome under similar conditions ( Adkins, J. N. et al. Mol. Cell. Proteomics 2006, 5, 1450-1461 ). Comparative proteomics analysis of S. typhi strain Ty2 and S. typhimurium strain LT2 revealed a subset of highly expressed proteins unique to S. typhi that were exclusively detected under conditions that are thought to mimic the infective state in macrophage cells. These proteins included CdtB, HlyE, and gene products of t0142, t1108, t1109, t1476, and t1602. The differential expression of T1108, T1476, and HlyE was confirmed by Western blot analysis. When our observations are taken together with the current literature, they suggest that this subset of proteins may play a role in S. typhi pathogenesis and human host specificity.  相似文献   

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Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium invades intestinal epithelial cells using a type three secretion system (TTSS) encoded on Salmonella Pathogenicity Island 1 (SPI1). The SPI1 TTSS injects effector proteins into the cytosol of host cells where they promote actin rearrangement and engulfment of the bacteria. We previously identified RtsA, an AraC-like protein similar to the known HilC and HilD regulatory proteins. Like HilC and HilD, RtsA activates expression of SPI1 genes by binding upstream of the master regulatory gene hilA to induce its expression. HilA activates the SPI1 TTSS structural genes. Here we present evidence that hilA expression, and hence the SPI1 TTSS, is controlled by a feedforward regulatory loop. We demonstrate that HilC, HilD and RtsA are each capable of independently inducing expression of the hilC, hilD and rtsA genes, and that each can independently activate hilA. Using competition assays in vivo, we show that each of the hilA regulators contribute to SPI1 induction in the intestine. Of the three, HilD has a predominant role, but apparently does not act alone either in vivo or in vitro to sufficiently activate SPI1. The two-component regulatory systems, SirA/BarA and OmpR/EnvZ, function through HilD, thus inducing hilC, rtsA and hilA. However, the two-component systems are not responsible for environmental regulation of SPI1. Rather, we show that 'SPI1 inducing conditions' cause independent activation of the rtsA, hilC and hilD genes in the absence of known regulators. Our model of SPI1 regulation provides a framework for future studies aimed at understanding this complicated regulatory network.  相似文献   

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