| Literature DB >> 33185702 |
Vanessa Kreling1, Franco H Falcone2, Corinna Kehrenberg3, Andreas Hensel4.
Abstract
Infections caused by bacterial species from the genus Campylobacter are one of the four main causes of strong diarrheal enteritis worldwide. Campylobacteriosis, a typical food-borne disease, can range from mild symptoms to fatal illness. About 550 million people worldwide suffer from campylobacteriosis and lethality is about 33 million p.a. This review summarizes the state of the current knowledge on Campylobacter with focus on its specific virulence factors. Using this knowledge, multifactorial prevention strategies can be implemented to reduce the prevalence of Campylobacter in the food chain. In particular, antiadhesive strategies with specific adhesion inhibitors seem to be a promising concept for reducing Campylobacter bacterial load in poultry production. Antivirulence compounds against bacterial adhesion to and/or invasion into the host cells can open new fields for innovative antibacterial agents. Influencing chemotaxis, biofilm formation, quorum sensing, secretion systems, or toxins by specific inhibitors can help to reduce virulence of the bacterium. In addition, the unusual glycosylation of the bacterium, being a prerequisite for effective phase variation and adaption to different hosts, is yet an unexplored target for combating Campylobacter sp. Plant extracts are widely used remedies in developing countries to combat infections with Campylobacter. Therefore, the present review summarizes the use of natural products against the bacterium in an attempt to stimulate innovative research concepts on the manifold still open questions behind Campylobacter towards improved treatment and sanitation of animal vectors, treatment of infected patients, and new strategies for prevention. KEY POINTS: • Campylobacter sp. is a main cause of strong enteritis worldwide. • Main virulence factors: cytolethal distending toxin, adhesion proteins, invasion machinery. • Strong need for development of antivirulence compounds.Entities:
Keywords: Adhesion; Antivirulence; Campylobacter; Epidemiology; Virulence factors; Zoonosis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33185702 PMCID: PMC7662028 DOI: 10.1007/s00253-020-10974-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Appl Microbiol Biotechnol ISSN: 0175-7598 Impact factor: 4.813
Fig. 1The C. jejuni flagellum. Adapted according to Burnham and Hendrixson (2018). C. jejuni possesses two polar flagella which basically consist of the flagellar filament and the basal body with the MS and C ring, encasing the type III secretion system and the hook and rod traversing the bacterium’s cell surface. The flagellar filament is composed of O-glycosylated flagellin proteins FlaA and FlaB. The basal body is surrounded by the basal, medial, and proximal disc which are composed of FlgP, PflA, and MotAB. The MS ring is formed by FliF multimers and the C ring of FliG multimers. The T3SS secretes flagellar proteins, Cia and Fed proteins
Fig. 2Regulation of flagellar formation on the cell physiology by different flagellins. Adapted according to Burnham and Hendrixson (2018). The flagellar formation is subject to various regulatory checkpoints. The flagellar number and polar position is regulated by the flagellar motor switch proteins FlhF-GTPase and the FlhG-ATPase where the FlhG-ATPase affects activity of FlhF. Through FlhG, also the polymerization of the cell division protein FtsZ is inhibited and thereby symmetrical cell division is influenced. Flagellin transcription is controlled by the FlgS sensor kinase which interacts with the FliF and FliG multimers (formation of MS and C ring). Through autophosphorylation of FlgS, a signal transduction to FlgR is induced which is phosphorylated and σ54-dependent flagellar rod and hook genes are transcribed followed by the secretion of σ28-dependent flagellin and fed proteins
Overview on C. jejuni virulence factors
| Virulence factor | Gene | Functions | Features |
|---|---|---|---|
| I. Adhesins | |||
| CadF ( | Binding to fibronectin of epithelial cells | Outer membrane protein, adhesion to fibronectin is required for the delivery of Cia proteins into the cyotosol of the host cells | |
| FlpA (fibrin-like peptide A) | Binding to fibronectin of epithelial cells | Outer membrane protein | |
| CapA ( | Impact on the ability to adhere to and penetrate into host cells | Outer membrane, surface-exposed lipoprotein with autotransporter function | |
| HtrA (high temperature requirement protein A) | Cleavage of E-cadherin and occludin; proper adhesion folding | Responsible for growth at elevated temperature, proliferation under high oxygen content, expression of protease activity, adhesion, invasion, and transmigration | |
| Peb1, 3, and 4 (periplasmic-binding protein) | Influencing the transport of CadF to the outer membrane as chaperones | ||
| JlpA ( | Binding to a heat shock protein (HSP 90a), inflammatory response | Surface-exposed, glycosylated lipoprotein, containing multiple ligand binding sites | |
| II. Invasion factors | |||
| Cia ( | Initiate the internalization of | Cia proteins are secreted by the flagellar T3SS and introduced into the cytoplasm | |
| Invasion-associated protein | Invasion | ||
| III. Toxins | |||
| CDT (cytolethal distending toxin) | Cytotoxicity, inflammation | CdtB is the active component, while cdtA and cdtC mediate the binding to and internalization into the host cell | |
| IV. Iron acquisition factors | |||
| Ferrous uptake | Growth under iron restriction | Membrane porin | |
| Enterobactin uptake | Growth under iron restriction | Siderophore receptor | |
| Lactoferrin and transferrin uptake | Growth under iron restriction | Siderophore receptor | |
| Hemin uptake | Growth under iron restriction | Siderophore receptor | |
| Ferric regulation | Iron homeostasis | ||
| Ferritin bacterioferritin | Iron storage and protection against oxidative stress | ||
| V. Flagellum | |||
| (a) Motility | |||
| Movement through the viscous intestinal mucin layer | |||
| Filament | Motility, secretion invasion | The flagellin proteins are O-glycosylated with pseudamic acid, which is essential for polymerization | |
| Rod | Motility | ||
| Hook | Anchoring | ||
| Discs (basal, medial, proximal | Motility | Surrounding the flagellum anchor in the periplasmic space | |
| Flagellar motor proteins | Motility | The motor is composed of 17 stators, which are oriented on the disc skeleton to create a greater distance to the central motor axis and the rotor. This results in greater torque and force | |
| MS ring | |||
| C ring | |||
| (b) Chemotaxis | |||
| Che-kinases | Transmitting the information to the flagellar motor through phosphorylation | ||
| Chemotactic receptors | Sensoring the exogenous stimuli | Methyl-accepting chemotaxis proteins (also called transducer-like proteins) | |
| Energy taxis system | Transduction of the energy signal to the chemotactic system | ||
| (c) Secretion | |||
| Type III secretion system | Secretes various proteins such as Cia, Fed and FlaC, IamA | Located in the core of the flagellum | |
| Type VI secretion system | Adaption to bile acids | Colonization factor | |
| VI. Surface structures | |||
| LOS (lipooligosaccharide) | Influence on immunogenicity and invasion ability, mediating cellular interactions | O- or HS-antigen Phase-variable structure resembles to human neural gangliosides | |
| CPS (capsular polysaccharide) | Influences colonization, adhesion and invasion, resistance factors and immune response | Phase-variable serotype specificity | |
| VII. Others | |||
| Post-transcriptional regulation | Regulation of virulence factors and metabolism, biofilms | mRNA-binding regulator | |
| | Regulation of virulence factors, biofilm formation, colonization | AI-2 biosynthesis enzyme (hydrolysis of S-adenosylhomocysteine) | |
| Resistance | Multidrug and bile resistance | CME efflux pumps consist of a periplasmic protein (CmeA), inner membrane efflux transporter (CmeC) and outer membrane protein (CmeC) | |
| Antimicrobial proteins | Protection | ||
| Antioxidant proteins | Protection against oxidative stress | Survival outside the host | |
| Stress resistance | Coding for a heat shock protein | ||
| Synthesis of an outer membrane phospholipase | Related to cell invasion and colonization | ||
| Glycosylation | N-linked glycosylation of other outer membrane proteins | ||
Antimicrobial resistance mechanisms in Campylobacter (Lynch et al. (2020); Liu et al. (2019))
| Antibiotic classes in use against | Resistance mechanism of |
|---|---|
| Aminoglycosides | Modification by aminoglycoside-modifying enzymes (AphA, AadE, Aad9, Sat, Hph, AacA4, Aac3, Aph(2″)-If (formerly designated as AacA4/AphD), Aph(2″)-Ib, -Ic, -Ig, -If, -If1, -If3, -Ih, Aac(6′)Ie/Aph(2″)-Ia, Aac(6´)Ie/Aph(2″)-If2) |
| β-Lactams | Enzymatic inactivation by β-lactamases (penicillinase, BlaOXA-61) Reduced membrane permeability through the major outer membrane protein (MOMP) Efflux via CmeABC transporter |
| Fluoroquinolones | Modification of GyrA (T86I, T86K, T86A, T86V, D90N, D90Y, A70T, also in combination e.g.T86I/P104S, T86I/D90N) Efflux via CmeABC transporter |
| Macrolides | Point mutations in 23S rRNA genes Mutations in the L4/L22 ribosomal proteins Methylation by Erm(B)rRNA methyl transferase Efflux via CmeABC transporter Reduced membrane permeability due to MOMP |
| Tetracyclines | Ribosomal protection by binding of TetO or TetO mosaic resistance determinants (e.g., TetO/32/O) Efflux via CmeABC and CmeG transporters |
| Organoarsenicals | Efflux via ArsP (methylarsenite efflux permease) |
| Fosfomycin | fosXCC |
| Multiple drug resistance | CmeABC efflux system (significant role in acquired and intrinsic resistance) Re-CmeABC (variant of CmeABC which confers significantly higher levels of resistance) CmeDEF efflux system (moderate role in intrinsic resistance) CfrC (rRNA methyl transferase) Multidrug resistance genomic islands (MDRGIs) |
Microbial control strategies for improved prevention of Campylobacteriosis
| Preharvest approach | Examples |
|---|---|
| Cleaning the production chain | - Eradication of contaminated flocks - Sanitizing hatching eggs |
| Limiting the introduction and spread of pathogens | - Biosecurity measurements (hygiene barriers and restricted access) - Bacteriological examination of farm staff - Protective clothing |
| General hygiene measures | Sanitizing and washing - Equipment - Disinfectant footbaths - Guidelines on cleaning |
| Feed hygiene | - Clean water - Hygiene storage - Microbiological testing |
| Feed additives | - Short-chain organic acids - Carbohydrates - Probiotics |
| Vaccines | |
| Harvest approach | |
| Hygienic catching and transport | - By trained personnel to cause no stress to the birds - Prevent heat stress - Ventilation |
| Postharvest approach | |
| Slaughter | - Prevent cross-contamination |
| Physical methods | - Freezing (for a few days to 3 weeks) - Hot water immersion - Irradiation - Cooking - Crust-freezing - Steam |
| Chemical methods | - Lactic acid (2%) - Acidified sodium chloride (1200 mg/L) - Chlorine dioxide (50–100 mg/L) - Trisodium phosphate (10–12%, pH 12) - Acidified electrolyzed oxidizing water (immersion) - Peroxyacetic acid |
| Decontamination of poultry meat | |
| Consumer awareness | |
| Safe food handling | |