Katribe Erin, Bogomolnaya Lydia M, Wingert Heather, Andrews-Polymenis Helene
Department of Medical Microbiology and Immunology, College of Medicine, Texas A&M University System Health Science Center, 407 Reynolds Medical Building, College Station, TX 77843-1114, USA.
J Bacteriol. 2009 Apr;191(8):2843-50. doi: 10.1128/JB.01223-08. Epub 2009 Feb 13.
Non-subspecies I salmonellae are commensals of cold-blooded vertebrates and cause sporadic disease in mammals. The reasons why non-subspecies I salmonellae do not circulate in populations of warm-blooded vertebrates, but instead only cause occasional disease in this niche, are unknown. We examined the ability of Salmonella enterica subsp. IIIa (subsp. arizonae) and subsp. IIIb (subsp. diarizonae) isolates to grow competitively with subspecies I (serovar Typhimurium) ATCC 14028 in vitro, to colonize Salmonella-sensitive BALB/c mice, and to persist in the intestine of Salmonella-resistant CBA/J mice in competitive infections. Subspecies IIIa had severely reduced intestinal colonization, intestinal persistence, and systemic spread in mice. Subspecies IIIa is nonmotile on swarming agar and thus may also have reduced motility under viscous conditions in vivo. Surprisingly, subspecies IIIb colonizes the intestinal tract of BALB/c mice normally yet does not spread systemically. Subspecies IIIb colonization of the intestine of CBA/J mice is reduced late in infection. In order to understand why these isolates do not colonize systemic sites, we determined that subspecies IIIa and IIIb are not internalized well and do not replicate in J774-A.1 murine macrophages, despite normal adherence to these cells. We further show that selected effectors of both type III secretion systems 1 and 2 are secreted by subspecies IIIa and IIIb in vitro but that each of these isolates secretes a different combination of effectors. We outline the phenotypic differences between these subspecies and subspecies I and provide a possible explanation for the inability of these strains to spread systemically in murine models.
非I亚种沙门氏菌是冷血脊椎动物的共生菌,可在哺乳动物中引发散发性疾病。非I亚种沙门氏菌为何不在温血脊椎动物群体中传播,而是仅在这一生态位偶尔引发疾病,原因尚不清楚。我们检测了肠炎沙门氏菌IIIa亚种(亚利桑那亚种)和IIIb亚种(双亚利桑那亚种)分离株在体外与I亚种(鼠伤寒血清型)ATCC 14028竞争性生长的能力、在对沙门氏菌敏感的BALB/c小鼠中定殖的能力以及在竞争性感染中在对沙门氏菌有抗性的CBA/J小鼠肠道中持续存在的能力。IIIa亚种在小鼠中的肠道定殖、肠道持久性和全身传播能力严重降低。IIIa亚种在群游琼脂上不运动,因此在体内粘性条件下其运动性可能也会降低。令人惊讶的是,IIIb亚种能正常定殖于BALB/c小鼠的肠道,但不会全身扩散。IIIb亚种在CBA/J小鼠肠道中的定殖在感染后期会减少。为了理解这些分离株为何不能定殖于全身部位,我们确定IIIa亚种和IIIb亚种虽能正常粘附于J774-A.1鼠巨噬细胞,但内化能力不佳且不在其中复制。我们进一步表明,IIIa亚种和IIIb亚种在体外可分泌III型分泌系统1和2的部分效应蛋白,但每种分离株分泌的效应蛋白组合不同。我们概述了这些亚种与I亚种之间的表型差异,并为这些菌株在小鼠模型中无法全身扩散提供了一种可能的解释。