| Literature DB >> 25487442 |
Jacqueline Boldrin de Paiva1, Janaína Luisa Leite2, Livia Pilatti Mendes da Silva2, Thais Cabrera Galvão Rojas2, Fernanda de Pace3, Rogério Arcuri Conceição2, Vanessa Sperandio4, Wanderley Dias da Silveira5.
Abstract
Avian Pathogenic Escherichia coli (APEC) strains are extra-intestinal E. coli that infect poultry and cause diseases. Nitrite is a central branch-point in bacterial nitrogen metabolism and is used as a cytotoxin by macrophages. Unlike nitric oxide (NO), nitrite cannot diffuse across bacterial membrane cells. The NirC protein acts as a specific channel to facilitate the transport of nitrite into Salmonella and E. coli cells for nitrogen metabolism and cytoplasmic detoxification. NirC is also required for the pathogenicity of Salmonella by downregulating the production of NO by the host macrophages. Based on an in vitro microarray that revealed the overexpression of the nirC gene in APEC strain SCI-07, we constructed a nirC-deficient SCI-07 strain (ΔnirC) and evaluated its virulence potential using in vivo and in vitro assays. The final cumulative mortalities caused by mutant and wild-type (WT) were similar; while the ΔnirC caused a gradual increase in the mortality rate during the seven days recorded, the WT caused mortality up to 24h post-infection (hpi). Counts of the ΔnirC cells in the spleen, lung and liver were higher than those of the WT after 48 hpi but similar at 24 hpi. Although similar number of ΔnirC and WT cells was observed in macrophages at 3 hpi, there was higher number of ΔnirC cells at 16 hpi. The cell adhesion ability of the ΔnirC strain was about half the WT level in the presence and absence of alpha-D-mannopyranoside. These results indicate that the nirC gene influences the pathogenicity of SCI-07 strain.Entities:
Keywords: APEC; Escherichia coli; Pathogenicity; Virulence; nirC
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25487442 DOI: 10.1016/j.vetmic.2014.11.015
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vet Microbiol ISSN: 0378-1135 Impact factor: 3.293