溶菌酶
毒力
生物
鼠疫耶尔森菌
微生物学
病菌
突变体
假结核耶尔森菌
鼠疫(疾病)
免疫系统
耶尔森尼亚
耶尔森菌病
基因
病毒学
细菌
遗传学
肠杆菌科
大肠杆菌
历史
考古
作者
Anne Derbise,François Pierre,Maud Merchez,Elizabeth Pradel,Sabrina Laouami,Isabelle Ricard,Jean‐Claude Sirard,Jill M. Fritz,Nadine Lemaître,Henry T. Akinbi,Ivo G. Boneca,Florent Sebbane
标识
DOI:10.1093/infdis/jit057
摘要
Background. Yersiniapestis (the plague bacillus) and its ancestor, Yersinia pseudotuberculosis (which causes self-limited bowel disease), encode putative homologues of the periplasmic lysozyme inhibitor Ivy and the membrane-bound lysozyme inhibitor MliC. The involvement of both inhibitors in virulence remains subject to debate. Methods. Mutants lacking ivy and/or mliC were generated. We evaluated the mutants' ability to counter lysozyme, grow in serum, and/or counter leukocytes; to produce disease in wild-type, neutropenic, or lysozyme-deficient rodents; and to induce host inflammation. Results. MliC was not required for lysozyme resistance and the development of plague. Deletion of ivy decreased Y. pestis' ability to counter lysozyme and polymorphonuclear neutrophils, but it did not affect the bacterium's ability to grow in serum or resist macrophages. Y. pestis lacking Ivy had attenuated virulence, unless animals were neutropenic or lysozyme deficient. The Ivy mutant induced inflammation to a degree similar to that of the parental strain. Last, Y. pseudotuberculosis did not require Ivy to counter lysozyme and for virulence. Conclusions. Ivy is required to counter lysozyme during infection, but its role as a virulence factor is species dependent. Our study also shows that a gene that is not necessary for the virulence of an ancestral bacterium may become essential in the emergence of a new pathogen.
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