Alteri Christopher J, Smith Sara N, Mobley Harry L T
Department of Microbiology and Immunology, University of Michigan Medical School, Ann Arbor, MI, USA.
PLoS Pathog. 2009 May;5(5):e1000448. doi: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1000448. Epub 2009 May 29.
Microbial pathogenesis studies traditionally encompass dissection of virulence properties such as the bacterium's ability to elaborate toxins, adhere to and invade host cells, cause tissue damage, or otherwise disrupt normal host immune and cellular functions. In contrast, bacterial metabolism during infection has only been recently appreciated to contribute to persistence as much as their virulence properties. In this study, we used comparative proteomics to investigate the expression of uropathogenic Escherichia coli (UPEC) cytoplasmic proteins during growth in the urinary tract environment and systematic disruption of central metabolic pathways to better understand bacterial metabolism during infection. Using two-dimensional fluorescence difference in gel electrophoresis (2D-DIGE) and tandem mass spectrometry, it was found that UPEC differentially expresses 84 cytoplasmic proteins between growth in LB medium and growth in human urine (P<0.005). Proteins induced during growth in urine included those involved in the import of short peptides and enzymes required for the transport and catabolism of sialic acid, gluconate, and the pentose sugars xylose and arabinose. Proteins required for the biosynthesis of arginine and serine along with the enzyme agmatinase that is used to produce the polyamine putrescine were also up-regulated in urine. To complement these data, we constructed mutants in these genes and created mutants defective in each central metabolic pathway and tested the relative fitness of these UPEC mutants in vivo in an infection model. Import of peptides, gluconeogenesis, and the tricarboxylic acid cycle are required for E. coli fitness during urinary tract infection while glycolysis, both the non-oxidative and oxidative branches of the pentose phosphate pathway, and the Entner-Doudoroff pathway were dispensable in vivo. These findings suggest that peptides and amino acids are the primary carbon source for E. coli during infection of the urinary tract. Because anaplerosis, or using central pathways to replenish metabolic intermediates, is required for UPEC fitness in vivo, we propose that central metabolic pathways of bacteria could be considered critical components of virulence for pathogenic microbes.
传统上,微生物发病机制研究包括剖析毒力特性,如细菌产生毒素、黏附并侵入宿主细胞、造成组织损伤或以其他方式破坏正常宿主免疫和细胞功能的能力。相比之下,直到最近人们才认识到感染期间细菌代谢对其持续性的贡献与毒力特性一样大。在本研究中,我们使用比较蛋白质组学来研究尿路致病性大肠杆菌(UPEC)在尿路环境中生长期间细胞质蛋白的表达情况,并对中心代谢途径进行系统性破坏,以更好地了解感染期间的细菌代谢。使用二维荧光差异凝胶电泳(2D-DIGE)和串联质谱法,发现UPEC在LB培养基中生长和在人尿中生长之间差异表达84种细胞质蛋白(P<0.005)。在尿中生长期间诱导的蛋白质包括参与短肽导入以及唾液酸、葡萄糖酸盐和戊糖木糖及阿拉伯糖运输和分解代谢所需的酶。精氨酸和丝氨酸生物合成所需的蛋白质以及用于产生多胺腐胺的酶胍丁胺酶在尿中也上调。为补充这些数据,我们构建了这些基因的突变体,并创建了每个中心代谢途径有缺陷的突变体,并在感染模型中测试了这些UPEC突变体在体内的相对适应性。在尿路感染期间,大肠杆菌的适应性需要肽的导入、糖异生和三羧酸循环,而糖酵解、戊糖磷酸途径的非氧化和氧化分支以及Entner-Doudoroff途径在体内是可有可无的。这些发现表明,肽和氨基酸是大肠杆菌在尿路感染期间的主要碳源。由于回补作用,即利用中心途径补充代谢中间体,是UPEC在体内适应性所必需的,我们提出细菌的中心代谢途径可被视为致病微生物毒力的关键组成部分。