HlyA knock out yields a safer Escherichia coli A0 34/86 variant with unaffected colonization capacity in piglets
Jazyk angličtina Země Velká Británie, Anglie Médium print
Typ dokumentu časopisecké články, práce podpořená grantem
PubMed
17064280
DOI
10.1111/j.1574-695x.2006.00140.x
PII: FIM140
Knihovny.cz E-zdroje
- MeSH
- bakteriální toxiny genetika MeSH
- delece genu MeSH
- Escherichia coli genetika patogenita MeSH
- genetická vazba MeSH
- hemolyziny genetika MeSH
- infekce vyvolané Escherichia coli mikrobiologie prevence a kontrola veterinární MeSH
- mapování chromozomů metody MeSH
- miniaturní prasata MeSH
- nemoci prasat mikrobiologie MeSH
- prasata MeSH
- proteiny z Escherichia coli genetika MeSH
- zvířata MeSH
- Check Tag
- zvířata MeSH
- Publikační typ
- časopisecké články MeSH
- práce podpořená grantem MeSH
- Názvy látek
- bakteriální toxiny MeSH
- cytotoxic necrotizing factor type 1 MeSH Prohlížeč
- hemolyziny MeSH
- Hlya protein, E coli MeSH Prohlížeč
- proteiny z Escherichia coli MeSH
Escherichia coli A0 34/86 (O83:K24:H31) has been successfully used for prophylactic and therapeutic intestinal colonization of premature and newborn infants, with the aim of preventing nosocomial infections. Although E. coli A0 34/86 was described as a nonpathogenic commensal, partial sequencing revealed that its genome harbours gene clusters highly homologous to virulence determinants of different types of E. coli, including closely linked genes of the alpha-haemolysin operon (hlyCABD) and for the cytotoxic necrotizing factor (cnf1). A haemolysin-deficient mutant (Delta hlyA) of E. coli A0 34/86 was generated and its colonization capacity was determined. The results show that a single dose of the A0 34/86 wild-type or Delta hlyA strains resulted in efficient intestinal colonization of newborn conventional piglets, and that this was still considerable after several weeks. No difference was observed between the wild-type and the mutant strains, showing that haemolysin expression does not contribute to intestinal colonization capacity of E. coli A0 34/86. Safety experiments revealed that survival of colostrum-deprived gnotobiotic newborn piglets was substantially higher upon colonization by the nonhaemolytic strain than following inoculation by its wild-type ancestor. We suggest that the E. coli A0 34/86 Delta hlyA mutant may represent a safer prophylactic and/or immunomodulatory tool with unaffected colonization capacity.
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General and molecular microbiology and microbial genetics in the IM CAS