| Literature DB >> 23637594 |
Fabian Rivera-Chávez1, Sebastian E Winter, Christopher A Lopez, Mariana N Xavier, Maria G Winter, Sean-Paul Nuccio, Joseph M Russell, Richard C Laughlin, Sara D Lawhon, Torsten Sterzenbach, Charles L Bevins, Renée M Tsolis, Rasika Harshey, L Garry Adams, Andreas J Bäumler.
Abstract
Chemotaxis enhances the fitness of Salmonella enterica serotype Typhimurium (S. Typhimurium) during colitis. However, the chemotaxis receptors conferring this fitness advantage and their cognate signals generated during inflammation remain unknown. Here we identify respiratory electron acceptors that are generated in the intestinal lumen as by-products of the host inflammatory response as in vivo signals for methyl-accepting chemotaxis proteins (MCPs). Three MCPs, including Trg, Tsr and Aer, enhanced the fitness of S. Typhimurium in a mouse colitis model. Aer mediated chemotaxis towards electron acceptors (energy taxis) in vitro and required tetrathionate respiration to confer a fitness advantage in vivo. Tsr mediated energy taxis towards nitrate but not towards tetrathionate in vitro and required nitrate respiration to confer a fitness advantage in vivo. These data suggest that the energy taxis receptors Tsr and Aer respond to distinct in vivo signals to confer a fitness advantage upon S. Typhimurium during inflammation by enabling this facultative anaerobic pathogen to seek out favorable spatial niches containing host-derived electron acceptors that boost its luminal growth.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23637594 PMCID: PMC3630101 DOI: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1003267
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Pathog ISSN: 1553-7366 Impact factor: 6.823
Figure 1The aer and tsr genes confer a competitive growth advantage during colitis.
Groups of streptomycin pre-treated mice (N is indicated below the graph in panel A) were inoculated with equal mixtures of the indicated S. Typhimurium strains and organs were collected for analysis four days after infection. Mice were infected either with an equal mixture of two strains (black bars in panel B) or with an equal mixture of the S. Typhimurium wild type (+ wt) and two mutant strains (white bars in panel B). (A) Induction of transcripts encoding the inflammatory markers Kc (encoded by the Kc gene, black bars) and iNOS (encoded by the Nos2 gene, white bars) in the murine cecum after infection with the indicated mixtures of S. Typhimurium strains. Expression of Kc and Nos2 in the cecal mucosa was determined by quantitative real-time PCR analysis. Bars represent geometric means of Kc and Nos2 mRNA copy numbers as fold-change over mRNA levels in mock-infected mice ± standard error. (B) Competitive indices (CI) of S. Typhimurium strains recovered from the colon contents of infected mice. Bars represent geometric means ± standard error. *, P<0.05; ns, not significant.
Figure 2The aer and tsr genes mediate energy taxis towards tetrathionate and nitrate, respectively.
Migration of the indicated S. Typhimurium strains from a reservoir into a capillary was measured using the capillary assay. The competitive index was calculated by dividing the ratio of the two competing strains present in the capillary after 45 minutes of incubation through the ratio present in the inoculum. Bars represent geometric means of competitive indices (CI) from at least three independent experiments ± standard error. *, P<0.05; ns, not significant; wt, wild type. (A) Migration into a capillary containing the indicated concentrations of tetrathionate (S4O6 2−) was determined after incubation under anaerobic conditions (O2, −) or in the presence of oxygen (O2, +). (B) Migration into a capillary containing the indicated concentrations of nitrate (NO3 −) was determined after incubation under anaerobic conditions (O2, −) or in the presence of oxygen (O2, +).
Figure 3Inactivation of aer or tsr decreases numbers of S. Typhimurium in close proximity to the inflamed mucosal surface.
Bovine ligated ileal loops (N: each inoculum was tested in loops from 4 different animals) were infected with an equal mixture of the indicated S. Typhimurium strains and samples collected 8 hours after infection from the luminal fluid and tissue punches (tissue-associated bacteria). (A) Bars represent geometric means of competitive indices (CI) ± standard error. (B) Fluid accumulation observed 8 hours after infection expressed as a percent of the response observed in loops infected with an equal mixture of the S. Typhimurium wild-type strain (AJB715) and a tsr mutant. Bars represent geometric means ± standard error. *, P<0.05; ns, not significantly different.
Figure 4Aer and Tsr boost growth in the mouse colitis model.
Groups of streptomycin pre-treated mice were inoculated with the S. Typhimurium wild-type strain (wt), an aer mutant (aer), a tsr mutant (tsr) or a cheY mutant (cheY) and colon contents were collected for analysis four days after infection. The numbers of animals (N) used in each group is indicated in Figure S4A. Bacterial load in the colon contents of infected mice are shown. Bars represent geometric means ± standard error. *, P<0.05; ns, not significant.
Bacterial strains used in this study.
| Strain | Genotype | Source/Reference |
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| ATCC 14028 | Wild-type isolate of | ATCC |
| IR715 | Nalidixic acid-resistant derivative of ATCC 14028 |
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| AJB715 | IR715 Δ |
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| AT350 |
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| FR4 | IR715 | This Study |
| FR5 | IR715 | This Study |
| FR6 | IR715 | This Study |
| FR7 | IR715 | This Study |
| FR8 | IR715 | This Study |
| FR9 | IR715 | This Study |
| FR10 | IR715 Δ | This Study |
| FR11 | IR715 Δ | This Study |
| FR13 | IR715 | This Study |
| FR35 | IR715 | This Study |
| FR36 | IR715 | This Study |
| FR37 | IR715 | This Study |
| FR38 | IR715 Δ | This Study |
| FR42 | IR715 | This Study |
| FR43 | IR715 Δ | This Study |
| FR46 | IR715 | This Study |
| FR47 | IR715 | This Study |
| CAL50 | IR715 Δ |
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| MB193 | 14028 | This Study |
| QW111 | 14028 | This Study |
| SM15 | 14028 | This Study |
| SM19 | 14028 | This Study |
| SPN452 | IR715 Δ |
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| SPN453 | IR715 Δ | This Study |
| SPN455 | IR715 Δ | This Study |
| SPN458 | IR715 Δ |
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| SPN487 | IR715 Δ | This Study |
| SW215 | IR715 |
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| SW661 | IR715 |
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| DH5α λ | F−
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| S17-1 λ |
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| TOP10 | F−
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CmR: chloramphenicol resistance; CarbR: carbenicillin resistance; KanR: kanamycin resistance, TetR: tetracycline resistance.
Plasmids used in this study.
| Designation | Relevant Characteristics | Reference/source |
| pBS34 | pBluescript II KS+ (CarbR, KanR, KSAC cassette) |
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| pCR2.1 | Cloning vector; CarbR, KanR | Invitrogen |
| pEP185.2 |
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| pFR2 |
| This Study |
| pFR3 |
| This Study |
| pFR4 |
| This Study |
| pFR5 |
| This Study |
| pFR6 |
| This Study |
| pKD3 | oriR6K, CmR |
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| pKD4 | oriR6K, KanR |
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| pKD46 | Plasmid encoding lambda red recombinase |
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| pSPN57 | pRDH10(CmR, Δ |
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| pSPN60 | pSPN57(CmR, KanR, Δ | This Study |
| pWSK29 | Cloning vector; CarbR |
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| pWSK129 | Cloning vector; KanR |
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Primers used in this study.
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| del_A |
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| S22F_B |
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| KSAC (outwards cassette primers)/ |
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RT PCR, quantitative real-time PCR.