| Literature DB >> 20942914 |
Lisa Ott1, Martina Höller, Johannes Rheinlaender, Tilman E Schäffer, Michael Hensel, Andreas Burkovski.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Corynebacterium diphtheriae, the causative agent of diphtheria, is well-investigated in respect to toxin production, while little is known about C. diphtheriae factors crucial for colonization of the host. In this study, we investigated strain-specific differences in adhesion, invasion and intracellular survival and analyzed formation of pili in different isolates.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20942914 PMCID: PMC2965157 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2180-10-257
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Microbiol ISSN: 1471-2180 Impact factor: 3.605
Figure 1Adhesion of . D562 cells were infected with different C. diphtheriae strains. Besides DSM43989, which is tox+, the isolates are non-toxigenic. The cells were washed with PBS, detached with trypsin solution, lysed with Tween 20, and the number of colony forming units (cfus) was determined. Adhesion is expressed as percentage of the inoculum, showing means and standard deviations of ten independent measurements (biological replicates) with 3 samples each (technical replicates). All strains, except ISS4746 and ISS4749, show statistically significant differences in adhesion rates (students TTEST values below 0.04).
Figure 2Invasion of epithelial cells by . D562 cells were infected with different C. diphtheriae strains (DSM43989 tox+, all others are non-toxigenic), washed, and incubated 2.0 (A), 8.5 (B) and 18.5 (C) hours with 100 μg ml-1 gentamicin. Subsequently, cells were washed, detached with trypsin solution, lysed with Tween 20, and the number of intracellular cfus was determined. Invasion is shown as percentage of the inoculum internalized (means and standard deviations of three independent biological replicates with three samples each (technical replicates). Statistically relevant differences between the strains (based on students TTEST values below 0.05) are indicated by letters above columns.
Figure 3Detection of intracellular . D562 cells were seeded on coverslips 48 h prior to infection and infected with C. diphtheriae (DSM43989 tox+, all others are non-toxigenic) for 4 h with at a MOI of 200 as described earlier [26]. Antibodies directed against the surface proteome of C. diphtheriae were used as primary, Alexa Fluor 488 goat anti-rabbit IgGs and Alexa-Fluor 568 goat anti-rabbit IgGs as secondary antibodies (A, D: intact D562, B, E: permeabilized D562, C, F: overlay with blue F-actin stain Phalloidin-Alexa-Fluor 647, A-C: ISS3319, D-F: ISS4060. Green stain in panels A and D indicate extracellular bacteria. Dark red stain in panels B and E indicates internalized C. diphtheriae, while adherent bacteria appear in light red. In the overlay (C, F) extracellular C. diphtheriae appear orange, while internalized bacteria are stained dark red. Scale bars: 20 μm.
Figure 4Transepithelial resistance of polarized D562 monolayers grown on transwells. (A) Control experiments of cells, which were incubated without bacteria (open circles) and S. enterica serovar Typhimurium (open squares). (B) Incubation with C. diphtheriae strains DSM43989 (tox+, open stars), ISS4749 (inverted closed triangles), ISS4746 (closed triangles), ISS4060 closed circles, ISS3319 (closed square), DSM43988 (closed hexagons), and DSM44123 (closed diamonds). Experiments were carried out independently at least thrice and typical results are shown.
Figure 5Ultrastructural analysis of the cell surface of . (A) Bacteria were fixed on glass slides by drying using compressed air. Atomic force microscopy was carried out under ambient laboratory conditions and operated in tapping mode. Scale bars: 500 nm. (B) AFM images were analyzed in respect to pili number per bacterium. For each strain pili of at least six bacteria were counted; error bars indicate deviations from mean values.
Figure 6Strain-specific distribution and expression of pili-encoding genes. (A) Levels of spa gene transcripts in different C. diphtheriae strains. Total RNA was isolated from the indicated C. diphtheriae strains and hybridized with probes monitoring 16SrRNA for control as well as spa gene transcription. (B) PCR detection of spa genes. Chromosomal DNA of the indicated C. diphtheriae strains was used as template for PCR using specific oligonucleotide pairs for the spa genes indicated at the right side of the figure.
Figure 7PCR detection of . Chromosomal DNA of C. diphtheriae strain NCTC 13129 was used as template for PCR using specific oligonucleotide pairs for the indicated spa genes. In all cases, DNA fragments of the expected size were amplified.
Bacterial strains and eukaryotic cell lines used in this study
| Strains | Description | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| DSM43988 | non-toxigenic, isolated from throat culture | DSMZ, Braunschweig, Germany |
| DSM43989 | DSMZ, Braunschweig, Germany | |
| DSM44123 | non-toxigenic isolate, type-strain, unknown source | DSMZ, Braunschweig, Germany |
| ISS3319 | [ | |
| ISS4060 | [ | |
| ISS4746 | [ | |
| ISS4749 | [ | |
| NCTC13129 | [ | |
| DH5αMCR | [ | |
| NCTC12023 | wild type identical to ATCC14028 | NCTC, Colindale, UK |
| Detroit562 | human hypopharyngeal carcinoma cells | [ |
Oligonucleotides used in this study
| Designation | Sequence (5'→3' direction) | Application |
|---|---|---|
| DIP0235-as | ctt ggt tgc cgg agc agc ctc ctt | PCR |
| DIP0235-s | ccg aaa cca aga ccg aga aga ccg tca ag | PCR |
| DIP0237-as | gca cac cag tca gcg cca agt cgc | PCR |
| DIP0237-s | cgc gac tac gga acc gac acg ctg a | PCR |
| DIP0238-as | gaa gtt gaa agg tcg gcc act aca gca a | PCR |
| DIP0238-s | aaa ggg cta cta cat caa cat tcc aga cac | PCR |
| DIP2010asT7 | cgc gta ata cga ctc act ata ggg tcc atc acg agg aac gac aac ggt ttt aga | |
| DIP2010-s | cgc tac tcc tat ggg caa gca cct act gat att c | |
| DIP2011asT7 | cgc gta ata cga ctc act ata ggg tgg tgg cga tgg cca gca gtc cga | |
| DIP2011-s | tgc agc att cgc cga cga cca acc | |
| SondeDIP2013-asT7 | ggg ccc taa tac gac tca cta tag gga gga ctg gag tgt tgc gcc g | |
| SondeDIP2013-s | ggc gtc gaa aat caa gct gg | |
| DIP2223asT7 | cgc gta ata cga ctc act ata ggg atc ggt aac ttc ctt acg gaa ctt ctc tgg cag | |
| DIP2223-s | ttg ccc gcg gga act atc gac gga | |
| SondeDIP2226-asT7 | ggg ccc taa tac gac tca cta tag ggc cca gcc cct gcg acg tc | |
| SondeDIP2226-s | gga ggg ctg gga ggc agt ca | |
| DIP2227asT7 | cgc gta ata cga ctc act ata ggg tcg acc ttg gac cag tgg acc tta gcg | |
| DIP2227-s | ccg gac aga aga ttg ctg ccg agg ca | |
| PromDIP2223-as | cgc ggg atc cag tag ggc gtc ctt tca gga | construction reporter plasmid for |
| PromDIP2223-s | cgc gat gca tgt gac gcc attt tat gta cgc | construction reporter plasmid for |
| PromDIP2226-as | cgc ggg atc cag ggt gtt ttc ctt tca gga | construction reporter plasmid for |
| PromDIP2226-s | cgc gat gca tcg tca aag tta cgg ccg acc | construction reporter plasmid for |
| PromDIP2227-as | cgc ggg atc cag tga aaa cac ctt cta ggg | construction reporter plasmid for |
| PromDIP2227-s | cgc gat gca ttg aac cgg aat cat ttc tta | construction reporter plasmid for |
| PromDIP2013-neu-as | cgc ggg atc ccc ctc aac tta ttt att tgg caa aaa g | construction reporter plasmid for |
| PromDIP2013-neu-s | cgc gat gca tat tgg tga gac tac ttc ctt aaa gct ggt | construction reporter plasmid for |
Plasmids used in this study
| Plasmid | Description | Reference/Source |
|---|---|---|
| pEPR1 | promoter sequence (500 bp) of | This study |
| pEPR1 | promoter sequence (500 bp) of | This study |
| pEPR1 | promoter sequence (500 bp) of | This study |
| pEPR1 | promoter sequence (500 bp) of | This study |
| pEPR1 | [ | |