| Literature DB >> 22919614 |
Abstract
Several intercellular bacterial communication mechanisms have been identified in a broad range of bacterial species. These systems, collectively termed quorum-sensing systems, have been demonstrated to play significant roles in a variety of bacterial processes including motility, biofilm formation, expression of virulence genes, and animal colonization. Campylobacter jejuni is known to possess a LuxS/ autoinducer-2 (AI-2) mediated system that have been partially characterized over the last decade. AI-2 is formed as a byproduct of the activated methyl recycling pathway, specifically by the LuxS enzyme. Previous work in our laboratory and that of others has demonstrated that this gene is involved in a variety of physiologic pathways of C. jejuni including motility, autoagglutination, cytolethal distending toxin (CDT) expression, flagellar expression, oxidative stress, and animal colonization. This review article will summarize the current research associated with LuxS in C. jejuni and will provide insights into the role of this system in the metabolism and intercellular communication of this organism. Additionally, the evidence for other quorum-sensing pathways in Campylobacter will be discussed.Entities:
Keywords: AI-2; Campylobacter; HSL; quorum-sensing; virulence
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22919614 PMCID: PMC3417632 DOI: 10.3389/fcimb.2012.00022
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Infect Microbiol ISSN: 2235-2988 Impact factor: 5.293
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| Growth | No significant difference | Elvers and Park, |
| Jeon et al., | ||
| Reeser et al., | ||
| He et al., | ||
| No difference at 42°C but decreased at 37°C | Holmes et al., | |
| Decreased in exponential phase but reach stationary at the same time | Quinones et al., | |
| Motility | Decreased in | Elvers and Park, |
| Jeon et al., | ||
| Holmes et al., | ||
| Quinones et al., | ||
| Plummer et al., | ||
| Motility able to be complemented | Quinones et al., | |
| Plummer et al., | ||
| Motility decreased in mutant at 37°C but not at 42°C | He et al., | |
| Motility not changed | Guerry et al., | |
| Decrease in | Jeon et al., | |
| Holmes et al., | ||
| Host colonization | Decreased colonization of chickens beyond day 4 post inoculation using 81–176 | Quinones et al., |
| Unchanged when monoinoculated NCTC 11168 | Plummer et al., | |
| Decreased competitive fitness of mutant | Plummer et al., | |
| Complete absence of colonization in chicks using IA3902 mutant | Plummer et al., | |
| Complete absence of colonization in guinea pigs using IA3902 mutant | Plummer et al., | |
| Decreased survival of mutant in meat juice stored at 5°C | Ligowska et al., | |
| Complete loss of abortion phenotype in guinea pig abortion model using IA3902, fully restored with complementation | Plummer et al., | |
| Biofilm formation | Decreased biofilm formation in mutant | Reeser et al., |
| Cytolethal distending toxin | Decrease in | Jeon et al., |
| Autoagglutination | Altered kinetics in mutant with decreased autoagglutination | Jeon et al., |
| Decreased autoagglutination | Guerry et al., | |
| Cellular adherence and invasion | No difference in wildtype and mutant on Caco-2 cells | Elvers and Park, |
| Decreased adherence and invasion of mutant on LMH cells | Quinones et al., | |
| Oxidative stress | No difference with hydrogen peroxide and paraquat | Elvers and Park, |
| Increased sensitivity of mutant to cumene hydroperoxide and hydrogen peroxide using disk diffusion | He et al., | |
| Increased sensitivity of mutant to hydrogen peroxide using MIC method | He et al., | |
| Chemotaxis | Increased chemotaxis of mutant to amino acids | Quinones et al., |
| Decreased chemotaxis of mutant to organic acids | Quinones et al., |