| Literature DB >> 30621582 |
Prerna Vohra1, Roy R Chaudhuri2, Matthew Mayho3, Christina Vrettou4, Cosmin Chintoan-Uta4, Nicholas R Thomson3, Jayne C Hope4, John Hopkins4, Mark P Stevens4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Salmonella enterica subspecies enterica is an animal and zoonotic pathogen of global importance. Cattle are a significant reservoir of human non-typhoidal salmonellosis and can suffer enteric and systemic disease owing to the ability of Salmonella to survive within the bovine lymphatic system and intestines. Contamination of food can occur due to the incorporation of contaminated peripheral lymph nodes or by direct contamination of carcasses with gut contents. It is essential to understand the mechanisms used by Salmonella to enter and persist within the bovine lymphatic system and how they differ from those required for intestinal colonization to minimize zoonotic infections.Entities:
Keywords: Niche-specific virulence; Salmonella; TraDIS; Zoonoses
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30621582 PMCID: PMC6325888 DOI: 10.1186/s12864-018-5319-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Genomics ISSN: 1471-2164 Impact factor: 3.969
Fig. 1Correlation of fitness scores of S. Typhimurium transposon-insertion mutants in the ileal wall and mesenteric lymph nodes and distribution of fitness scores. (a) A correlation plot showing a high degree of correlation between fitness scores of 8315 transposon-insertion mutants identified in the ileal wall and MLNs suggests that majority of mutants have similar phenotypes in both tissues. (b) Histograms of the fitness scores of mutants in the ileal wall and MLNs show that a large proportion of mutants have fitness scores approximate to zero in both tissues, suggesting that many insertions have no effect on phenotype. Based on fitting of bimodal distributions of fitness scores in the histograms, a fitness score of ≤ − 3.0 was selected as the cut-off value to define attenuation (within the yellow box)
Fig. 2Identification of S. Typhimurium transposon-insertion mutants with putative niche-specific differences in fitness. (a) A correlation plot showing mutants with differential fitness superimposed on all mutants [] and those attenuated in both tissues (within the yellow box). Orange dots [] indicate mutants of genes which were consistently attenuated only in the ileal wall and green dots [] indicate mutants of genes which were consistently attenuated only in MLNs. (b) A correlation plot highlighting the mutants of the 2 genes selected for validation: ptsN [] and spvC []
Fig. 3In vivo validation of the phenotype of a S. Typhimurium ptsN mutant. (a) The TraDIS fitness scores of transposon-insertion mutants of ptsN indicate attenuation in MLNs but not in the ileal wall. (b) Competitive index scores of ST4/74 nal ∆ptsN::cat compared to the wild-type ST4/74 nal confirmed the phenotype predicted by TraDIS in the ileal wall and MLNs. CIs in the caecal lymph node, liver and spleen show attenuation of ST4/74 nal ∆ptsN::cat in these tissues. CIs in faecal samples decreased over time. (c) Bacterial counts confirmed the total challenge dose of 3.07 × 108 CFU of mutant and wild-type bacteria and recovery of viable bacteria per tissue per calf is shown
Fig. 4In vivo validation of the phenotype of a S. Typhimurium spvC mutant. (a) The TraDIS fitness scores of transposon-insertion mutatns of spvC indicate attenuation in the ileal wall but not in MLNs. (b) Competitive index scores of ST4/74 nal ∆spvC::cat compared to the wild-type ST4/74 nal confirmed the phenotype predicted by TraDIS in the ileal wall and MLNs. CIs in the caecal lymph node were similar to those in the ileal wall but CIs in the liver and spleen show no attenuation of ST4/74 nal ∆spvC::cat in these tissues. CIs in faecal samples decreased over time. (c) Bacterial counts confirmed the total challenge dose of 7.2 × 108 CFU of mutant and wild-type bacteria and recovery of viable bacteria per tissue per calf is shown