| Literature DB >> 25349633 |
Chirantana Sengupta1, Sreejana Ray1, Rukhsana Chowdhury2.
Abstract
After entering the gastrointestinal (GI) tract on the way to their physiological site of infection, enteric bacteria encounter a remarkable diversity in environmental conditions. There are gross differences in the physico-chemical parameters in different sections of the GI tract e.g. between the stomach, small intestine and large intestine. Furthermore, even within a certain anatomical site, there are subtle differences in the microenvironment e.g. between the lumen, mucous layer and epithelial surface. Enteric pathogens must not only survive passage through the rapidly changing environments encountered at different niches of the GI tract but must also appropriately coordinate expression of virulence determinants in response to environmental cues at different stages of infection. There are some common themes in the responses of enteric pathogens to environmental cues, there are also distinct differences that may reflect differences in basic pathogenesis mechanisms. The role of bile and oxygen concentration in spatiotemporal regulation of virulence genes in selected enteric pathogens has been reviewed.Entities:
Keywords: Bile; Oxygen concentration; Salmonella; Shigella; V. cholerae; Virulence
Year: 2014 PMID: 25349633 PMCID: PMC4209513 DOI: 10.1186/s13099-014-0038-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Gut Pathog ISSN: 1757-4749 Impact factor: 4.181
Figure 1Effect of bile onvirulence regulation. A. When V. cholerae is grown in vitro under permissive conditions without bile the ToxR regulon is activated and the major virulence factors CT and TCP are produced. B. In the intestinal lumen where bile concentration is high, UFA present in bile prevents dimerization of ToxT and thus expression of the virulence genes ctxAB and tcpA is reduced. As the bacteria move away from the lumen through the mucus layer to the underlying epithelium, concentration of bile gradually decreases, consequently ctxAB and tcpA expression increases.
Figure 2Spatio-temporal regulation of virulence by oxygen The concentration of oxygen is low in the intestinal lumen but increases adjacent to the mucosal surface. A. In S. flexneri microaerobic condition of the lumen activates FNR [FNR(a)] which in turn represses Ipa secretion. Extended T3SS needles are formed. As the bacteria moves to the zone of higher oxygen concentration adjacent to the epithelial layer, FNR is inactivated [FNR(ia)] and T3SS effector genes are induced. B. In V. cholerae, the tcpA gene, but not ctxAB, is induced under the microaerobic condition of the lumen, when the bacteria reach the epithelial layer, the relatively higher oxygen concentration allows expression of both tcpA and ctxAB.