Sarker M R, Carman R J, McClane B A
Department of Molecular Genetics and Biochemistry, E1240 Biomedical Science Tower, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, PA 15261, USA.
Mol Microbiol. 1999 Sep;33(5):946-58. doi: 10.1046/j.1365-2958.1999.01534.x.
Previous epidemiological studies have implicated Clostridium perfringens enterotoxin (CPE) as a virulence factor in the pathogenesis of several gastrointestinal (GI) illnesses caused by C. perfringens type A isolates, including C. perfringens type A food poisoning and non-food-borne GI illnesses, such as antibiotic-associated diarrhoea and sporadic diarrhoea. To further evaluate the importance of CPE in the pathogenesis of these GI diseases, allelic exchange was used to construct cpe knock-out mutants in both SM101 (a derivative of a C. perfringens type A food poisoning isolate carrying a chromosomal cpe gene) and F4969 (a C. perfringens type A non-food-borne GI disease isolate carrying a plasmid-borne cpe gene). Western blot analyses confirmed that neither cpe knock-out mutant could express CPE during either sporulation or vegetative growth, and that this lack of CPE expression could be complemented by transforming these mutants with a recombinant plasmid carrying the wild-type cpe gene. When the virulence of the wild-type, mutant and complementing strains were compared in a rabbit ileal loop model, sporulating (but not vegetative) culture lysates of the wild-type isolates induced significant ileal loop fluid accumulation and intestinal histopathological damage, but neither sporulating nor vegetative culture lysates of the cpe knock-out mutants induced these intestinal effects. However, full sporulation-associated virulence could be restored by complementing these cpe knock-out mutants with a recombinant plasmid carrying the wild-type cpe gene, which confirms that the observed loss of virulence for the cpe knock-out mutants results from the specific inactivation of the cpe gene and the resultant loss of CPE expression. Therefore, in vivo analysis of our isogenic cpe mutants indicates that CPE expression is necessary for these two cpe-positive C. perfringens type A human disease isolates to cause GI effects in the culture lysate:ileal loop model system, a finding that supports CPE as an important virulence factor in GI diseases involving cpe-positive C. perfringens type A isolates.
以往的流行病学研究表明,产气荚膜梭菌肠毒素(CPE)是由A型产气荚膜梭菌分离株引起的几种胃肠道(GI)疾病发病机制中的一种毒力因子,包括A型产气荚膜梭菌食物中毒和非食源性胃肠道疾病,如抗生素相关性腹泻和散发性腹泻。为了进一步评估CPE在这些胃肠道疾病发病机制中的重要性,采用等位基因交换技术在SM101(携带染色体cpe基因的A型产气荚膜梭菌食物中毒分离株的衍生物)和F4969(携带质粒携带的cpe基因的A型产气荚膜梭菌非食源性胃肠道疾病分离株)中构建cpe基因敲除突变体。蛋白质免疫印迹分析证实,在芽孢形成或营养生长过程中,两种cpe基因敲除突变体均不能表达CPE,而通过用携带野生型cpe基因的重组质粒转化这些突变体,可以弥补CPE表达的缺失。当在兔回肠袢模型中比较野生型、突变型和互补菌株的毒力时,野生型分离株的芽孢形成(而非营养)培养裂解物诱导了显著的回肠袢液体积聚和肠道组织病理学损伤,但cpe基因敲除突变体的芽孢形成和营养培养裂解物均未诱导这些肠道效应。然而,通过用携带野生型cpe基因的重组质粒补充这些cpe基因敲除突变体,可以恢复与芽孢形成相关的全部毒力,这证实了观察到的cpe基因敲除突变体毒力丧失是由于cpe基因的特异性失活以及由此导致的CPE表达丧失。因此,对我们的同基因cpe突变体的体内分析表明,在培养裂解物:回肠袢模型系统中,CPE表达是这两种cpe阳性A型产气荚膜梭菌人类疾病分离株引起胃肠道效应所必需的,这一发现支持CPE作为涉及cpe阳性A型产气荚膜梭菌分离株的胃肠道疾病中的一种重要毒力因子。