| Literature DB >> 36013975 |
Ran Gao1,2,3,4, Jian Zhang1,2,3,4, Haoyu Geng1,2,3,4, Yaonan Wang1,2,3,4, Xilong Kang1,2,3,4, Shizhong Geng1,2,3,4, Xin'an Jiao1,2,3,4, Paul Barrow5.
Abstract
Salmonella Enteritidis (SE) can spread from the intestines to cause systemic infection, mainly involving macrophages. Intramacrophage Salmonella exits and reinfects neighboring cells, leading to severe disease. Salmonella genes involved in exiting from macrophages are not well understood or fully identified. A focA::Tn5 mutant was identified by an in vitro assay, with increased ability to exit from macrophages. A defined SEΔfocA mutant and its complemented derivative strain, SEΔfocA::focA, were constructed to confirm this phenotype. Although the lethal ability of focA mutants was similar to that of the parental SE in mice, it was isolated earlier from the liver and spleen than the parental SE. focA mutants induced higher levels of proinflammatory IL-12 and TNF-α compared with the parental SE and SEΔfocA::focA. focA mutants showed higher cytotoxicity and lower formate concentrations than SE and SEΔfocA::focA, whereas there was no change in pyroptosis, apoptosis and flagella formation ability. These current data suggest that the focA gene plays an important role in regulating intramacrophage Salmonella exiting and extraintestinal spread in mice, although the specific mechanism requires further in-depth studies.Entities:
Keywords: Salmonella Enteritidis; exit from macrophages; extraintestinal spread; focA gene; systemic infection; virulence
Year: 2022 PMID: 36013975 PMCID: PMC9414335 DOI: 10.3390/microorganisms10081557
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microorganisms ISSN: 2076-2607
Bacterial strains, plasmids and cells used in this study.
| Strains or Plasmids | Characteristic | Reference |
|---|---|---|
|
| ||
| SE C50041 | Wild-type | Lab collection |
| SE C50041 | C50041 with Tn | This study |
| SE C50041Δ | C50041 with a defined deletion of the | This study |
| SE C50041Δ | C50041∆ | This study |
| Its growth for pGMB152 with DAP, as conjugal donor | [ | |
|
| ||
| pUT mini-Tn | Transposon delivery vector, Cmr, Kmr | [ |
| pGMB152 | pGMB151 derivative, suicide vector, Ampr, Smr, | [ |
| pBR322 | For construction of C50041Δ | [ |
| pBR322- | pPR322 derivative containing | This study |
|
| ||
| RAW264.7 | Murine macrophages | This study |
Primers used in this study.
| Primer Name | Primer Sequences (5′-3′) | Target |
|---|---|---|
| Y-linker | CTGCTCGAATTCAAGCTTCT | PCR of sequence-flanking Tn |
| P6U | CGAGCTCGAATTCGGCCTAG | |
| Tn5-P | GGCCAGATCTGACAAGAGA | |
| Adapter | TTTCTGCTCGAATTCAAGCTTC | |
| TGTCCCCGTACATCGTTAGAACTACTCGTACCATCCACAT | ||
| Construction of SEΔ | ||
| CAGCCTACACAATCGCTCAA GATGCCCATTACACGCAGTAA | ||
| TTACTGCGTGTAATGGGCATC | ||
| CTTTGTTAGTATCTCGTCGCCG ATGGGAATTAGCCATGGTCC | ||
| GGACCATGGCTAATTCCCAT CGGCGACGAGATACTAACAAAG | ||
| ACGCAGGTAAATGACCCAGT | ||
| TTTTCGTGTTACTGATGTGGC | ||
| pGMB152-F | CGTGGAGGCCATCAAACCAC | |
| pGMB152-R | CGCGAAATAAACGACCGGGA | |
| R- | Construction of SEΔ | |
| R- |
“Underline” indicates the homologous sequence for one-step ligation of recombinant plasmid.
Primers used in this study.
| Primer Name | Primer Sequence (5′-3′) | Size (bp) |
|---|---|---|
| IL-1β-F | TGGCCTTCAAAGGAAAGAATCTATACCTGTCC | 167 |
| IL-1β-R | GTTGGGGAACTCTGCAGACTCAAACTCCAC | |
| IL-12-F | TGCCCCCACAGAAGACGTCTTTGATGAT | 138 |
| IL-12-R | GATGGCCACCAGCATGCCCTTGTC | |
| TNF-α-F | CAGGCCTTCCTACCTTCAGACCTTTCCAGAT | 122 |
| TNF-α-R | ACACCCCGCCCTTCCAAATAAATACATTCAT | |
| IFN-γ-F | GCCAAGACTGTGATTGCGGGGTTGTATCT | 198 |
| IFN-γ-R | TAAAGCGCTGGCCCGGAGTGTAGACA | |
| GAPDH-F | CAGCCTCGTCCCGTAGACAA | 156 |
| GAPDH-R | ACCCCGTCTCCGGAGTCCATCACAAT |
Figure 1Exiting ability of intracellular SE focA mutants from RAW264.7. Data are presented as mean ± SEM of three independent experiments; ** p < 0.01, *** p < 0.001.
Figure 2Extraintestinal spread of SE focA mutants by bacterial loads in murine liver and spleen. Data are presented as mean ± SEM of three independent experiments.
Figure 3The survival of mice infected by SE focA mutants. Data are presented as mean ± SEM of three independent experiments.
Figure 4mRNA levels of cytokines in murine spleen caused by SE focA mutants. Data are presented as mean ± SEM of three independent experiments; * p < 0.05, ** p < 0.01.
Figure 5Formate concentration in SE focA mutant at different culture times. Data are presented as mean ± SEM of three independent experiments; * p < 0.05, ** p < 0.01.
Figure 6Formate concentration in Salmonella-infected RAW264.7 (MOI = 100, T = 9). Data are presented as mean ± SEM of three independent experiments; * p < 0.05.
Figure 7The cytotoxicity of SE focA mutants to RAW264.7. Data are presented as mean ± SEM of three independent experiments; * p < 0.05.
Figure 8The ability of SE focA mutants to induce expression of caspase-1 protein: (a) Western blot analysis of caspase-1 protein: 1: focA::Tn5, 2: ΔfocA, 3: ΔfocA::focA, 4: C50041, 5: control group; (b) gray analysis of caspase-1 protein. Data are presented as mean ± SEM of three independent experiments.
Figure 9The apoptosis of the Salmonella-infected RAW264.7 was detected by flow cytometry. Data are presented as mean ± SEM of three independent experiments. *** p < 0.001.
Figure 10Motility analysis and flagellar observation of Salmonella focA mutants: (A) by U tube, (B) by semisolid agar plate, (C) by electron microscopy. The experiment was repeated in triplicate, and the results were consistent.