Affiliation:
1. University of Kentucky College of Medicine, Lexington, Kentucky, USA
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The Lyme disease spirochete,
Borrelia burgdorferi
, controls protein expression patterns during its tick-mammal infection cycle. Earlier studies demonstrated that
B. burgdorferi
synthesizes 4,5-dihydroxy-2,3-pentanedione (autoinducer-2 [AI-2]) and responds to AI-2 by measurably changing production of several infection-associated proteins.
luxS
mutants, which are unable to produce AI-2, exhibit altered production of several proteins.
B. burgdorferi
cannot utilize the other product of LuxS, homocysteine, indicating that phenotypes of
luxS
mutants are not due to the absence of that molecule. Although a previous study found that a
luxS
mutant was capable of infecting mice, a critical caveat to those results is that bacterial loads were not quantified. To more precisely determine whether LuxS serves a role in mammalian infection, mice were simultaneously inoculated with congenic wild-type and
luxS
strains, and bacterial numbers were assessed using quantitative PCR. The wild-type bacteria substantially outcompeted the mutants, suggesting that LuxS performs a significant function during mammalian infection. These data also provide further evidence that nonquantitative infection studies do not necessarily provide conclusive results and that regulatory factors may not make all-or-none, black-or-white contributions to infectivity.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology
Cited by
15 articles.
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