Relative contributions of Enterococcus faecalis OG1RF sortase-encoding genes, srtA and bps (srtC), to biofilm formation and a murine model of urinary tract infection.


Autoria(s): Kemp, Kelvin D; Singh, Kavindra V; Nallapareddy, Sreedhar R; Murray, Barbara E
Data(s)

01/11/2007

Resumo

Deletion mutants of the two sortase genes of Enterococcus faecalis OG1RF were constructed. srtC (renamed here bps for biofilm and pilus-associated sortase) was previously shown to be necessary for the production of Ebp pili and important for biofilm formation and endocarditis. Here, we report that a srtA deletion mutant showed a small (5%) yet significant (P = 0.037) reduction in biofilm relative to OG1RF, while a DeltasrtA Deltabps double mutant showed a much greater reduction (74% versus OG1RF and 44% versus the Deltabps mutant). In a murine urinary tract infection (UTI), the 50% infective doses of both the DeltasrtA Deltabps and Deltabps mutants were approximately 2 log10 greater than that of OG1RF or the DeltasrtA mutant. Similarly, approximately 2 log10 fewer bacteria were recovered from the kidneys after infection with the Deltabps mutant (P = 0.017) and the DeltasrtA Deltabps double mutant (P = 0.022) compared to wild-type strain OG1RF. In a competition UTI, the Deltabps mutant was slightly, but not significantly, less attenuated than the DeltasrtA Deltabps double mutant. Fluorescence-activated cell sorter analysis with Ebp-specific antibodies confirmed that a minority of OG1RF cells express Ebp pili on their surface in vitro and that Bps has a major role in Ebp pilus biogenesis but also indicated a function for SrtA in surface localization of the pilus subunit protein EbpA. In conclusion, deletion of bps had a major effect on virulence in murine UTIs, as well as biofilm; deletion of srtA from OG1RF had little effect on these phenotypes, but its deletion from a bps mutant had a pronounced effect on biofilm, suggesting that Bps and/or the proteins it anchors may compensate for the loss of some SrtA function(s).

Identificador

http://digitalcommons.library.tmc.edu/uthmed_docs/177

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2168291/?tool=pmcentrez

Publicador

DigitalCommons@The Texas Medical Center

Fonte

UT Medical School Journal Articles

Palavras-Chave #Animals #Biofilms #Colony Count #Microbial #Enterococcus faecalis #Fimbriae #Bacterial #Gene Deletion #Gram-Positive Bacterial Infections #Kidney #Mice #Urinary Tract Infections #Virulence #Virulence Factors #Colony Count, Microbial #Fimbriae, Bacterial #Medicine and Health Sciences
Tipo

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