Tomich Mladen, Herfst Christine A, Golden Joseph W, Mohr Christian D
Department of Microbiology, University of Minnesota Medical School, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55455-0312, USA.
Infect Immun. 2002 Apr;70(4):1799-806. doi: 10.1128/IAI.70.4.1799-1806.2002.
Burkholderia cepacia is an important opportunistic human pathogen that affects immunocompromised individuals, particularly cystic fibrosis (CF) patients. Colonization of the lungs of a CF patient by B. cepacia can lead not only to a decline in respiratory function but also to an acute systemic infection, such as bacteremia. We have previously demonstrated that a CF clinical isolate of B. cepacia, strain J2315, can invade and survive within cultured respiratory epithelial cells. In order to further characterize the mechanisms of invasion of B. cepacia, we screened a transposon-generated mutant library of strain J2315 for mutants defective in invasion of A549 respiratory epithelial cells. Here we describe isolation and characterization of a nonmotile mutant of B. cepacia with reduced invasiveness due to disruption of fliG, which encodes a component of the motor-switch complex of the flagellar basal body. We also found that a defined null mutation in fliI, a gene encoding a highly conserved ATPase required for protein translocation via the flagellar type III secretion system, also resulted in loss of motility and a significant reduction in invasion. Both mutants lacked detectable intracellular flagellin and failed to export detectable amounts of flagellin into culture supernatants, suggesting that disruption of fliG and fliI impaired flagellar biogenesis. The reduction in invasion did not appear to be due to defective adherence of the flagellar mutants to A549 cells, suggesting that functional flagella and motility are required for full invasiveness of B. cepacia. Our findings indicate that flagellum-mediated motility may facilitate penetration of host epithelial barriers by B. cepacia, contributing to establishment of infection and systemic spread of the organism.
洋葱伯克霍尔德菌是一种重要的人类机会致病菌,可感染免疫功能低下的个体,尤其是囊性纤维化(CF)患者。洋葱伯克霍尔德菌在CF患者肺部定殖不仅会导致呼吸功能下降,还会引发急性全身感染,如菌血症。我们之前已证明,CF临床分离株洋葱伯克霍尔德菌J2315菌株能够侵入培养的呼吸道上皮细胞并在其中存活。为了进一步阐明洋葱伯克霍尔德菌的侵入机制,我们筛选了J2315菌株的转座子诱变突变体文库,以寻找在侵入A549呼吸道上皮细胞方面存在缺陷的突变体。在此,我们描述了一株洋葱伯克霍尔德菌非运动型突变体的分离和特性,该突变体由于fliG基因的破坏而导致侵袭性降低,fliG基因编码鞭毛基体运动转换复合体的一个组成部分。我们还发现,fliI基因(编码鞭毛III型分泌系统蛋白质转运所需的高度保守ATP酶)的特定无效突变也导致运动能力丧失和侵袭力显著降低。这两种突变体均未检测到细胞内鞭毛蛋白,也未能向培养上清液中分泌可检测量的鞭毛蛋白,这表明fliG和fliI的破坏损害了鞭毛的生物合成。侵袭力的降低似乎并非由于鞭毛突变体对A549细胞的黏附缺陷所致,这表明功能性鞭毛和运动能力对于洋葱伯克霍尔德菌的完全侵袭性至关重要。我们的研究结果表明,鞭毛介导运动可能有助于洋葱伯克霍尔德菌穿透宿主上皮屏障,促进感染的建立和该菌的全身播散。