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CheY-mediated modulation of Campylobacter jejuni virulence
Authors:Ruijin Yao    Donald H Burr  & Patricia Guerry
Institution:Enteric Diseases Program, Naval Medical Research Institute Annex, 12300 Washington Avenue, Rockville, Bethesda, Maryland 20852, USA.; The Food and Drug Administration, Washington, DC, USA.
Abstract:Four motile, non-adherent and non-invasive mutants of Campylobacter jejuni 81-176 generated by a site-specific insertional mutagenesis scheme were characterized at the molecular level and all contained a duplication of the same region of the chromosome. When this region was cloned from wild-type 81-176 and transferred into 81-176 on a shuttle plasmid, the same non-invasive phenotype as the original mutants was observed, suggesting that the region contained a repressor of adherence and invasion. The smallest piece of DNA identified which was capable of repressing adherence and invasion was a 0.8 kb fragment encoding the cheY gene of C. jejuni. To confirm further that CheY was responsible for the observed non-adherent and non-invasive phenotypes, the cheY gene was inserted into the arylsulfatase gene of 81-176 to generate a strain with two chromosomal copies of cheY . This diploid strain displayed the same non-adherent and non-invasive phenotype as the original mutants. Insertional inactivation of the cheY gene in 81-176 resulted in an approx. threefold increase in adherence and invasion in vitro , but this strain was unable to colonize or cause disease in animals. The diploid cheY strain, although able to colonize mice, was attenuated in a ferret disease model.
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