Affiliation:
1. Section of Molecular Genetics and Microbiology and Institute for Cellular and Molecular Biology, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas 78712
Abstract
ABSTRACT
To assess the importance of TonB-dependent iron transport systems to growth of
Shigella
in vivo, a
tonB
mutant of
Shigella dysenteriae
was isolated and tested in cultured cells. The
tonB
mutant invaded epithelial cells, but did not form plaques in confluent monolayers of Henle cells, indicating an inability of this mutant to spread from cell to cell. The rate of intracellular multiplication of the
tonB
mutant was reduced significantly compared to that of the wild type. The loss of virulence in the
tonB
mutant was not due to loss of either Shu or Ent, the TonB-dependent systems which allow for transport of heme and ferrienterobactin, respectively. A
shuA
mutant lacking the outer membrane receptor for heme, an
entB
mutant defective in enterobactin synthesis, and a
shuA entB
double mutant each were able to invade cultured cells, multiply intracellularly, and form wild-type plaques. The ability of
S. dysenteriae
to access iron during intracellular growth was assessed by flow cytometric analysis of an iron- and Fur-regulated
shuA-gfp
reporter construct. Low levels of green fluorescent protein expression in the intracellular environment were observed in all strains, indicating that iron is available to intracellular bacteria, even in the absence of TonB-dependent iron transport. The failure of the
tonB
mutant to grow well in an iron-replete intracellular environment suggests that TonB plays a role in addition to heme- and siderophore-mediated iron acquisition in vivo, and this function is required for the intracellular growth and intercellular spread of
S. dysenteriae
.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology
Cited by
41 articles.
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