Affiliation:
1. Department of Microbiology and Immunology,1
2. Department of Human Biological Chemistry and Genetics,2 and
3. Department of Pathology,3 The University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston, Texas 77555-1070
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Transposon and marker exchange mutagenesis were used to evaluate the role of
Aeromonas
cytotoxic enterotoxin (Act) in the pathogenesis of diarrheal diseases and deep wound infections. The transposon mutants were generated by random insertion of Tn
5-751
in the chromosomal DNA of a diarrheal isolate SSU of
Aeromonas hydrophila
. Some of the transposon mutants had dramatically reduced hemolytic and cytotoxic activities, and such mutants exhibited reduced virulence in mice compared to wild-type
Aeromonas
when injected intraperitoneally (i.p.). Southern blot data indicated that transposition in these mutants did not occur within the cytotoxic enterotoxin gene (
act
). The transcription of the
act
gene was affected drastically in the transposon mutants, as revealed by Northern blot analysis. The altered virulence of these transposon mutants was confirmed by developing isogenic mutants of the wild-type
Aeromonas
by using a suicide vector. In these mutants, the truncated
act
gene was integrated in place of a functionally active
act
gene. The culture filtrates from isogenic mutants were devoid of hemolytic, cytotoxic, and enterotoxic activities associated with Act. These filtrates caused no damage to mouse small intestinal epithelium, as determined by electron microscopy, whereas culture filtrates from wild-type
Aeromonas
caused complete destruction of the microvilli. The 50% lethal dose of these mutants in mice was 1.0 × 10
8
when injected i.p., compared to 3.0 × 10
5
for the wild-type
Aeromonas
. Reintegration of the native
act
gene in place of the truncated toxin gene in isogenic mutants resulted in complete restoration of Act’s biological activity and virulence in mice. The animals injected with a sublethal dose of wild-type
Aeromonas
or the revertant, but not the isogenic mutant, had circulating toxin-specific neutralizing antibodies. Taken together, these studies clearly established a role for Act in the pathogenesis of
Aeromonas
-mediated infections.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology
Cited by
73 articles.
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