Affiliation:
1. Protein Design Labs, Inc., Fremont, California 94555
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Differential fluorescence induction (DFI) technology was used to identify promoters of
Streptococcus pneumoniae
induced under various in vitro and in vivo conditions. A promoter-trap library using green fluorescent protein as the reporter was constructed in
S. pneumoniae
, and the entire library was screened for clones exhibiting increased
gfp
expression under the chosen conditions. The in vitro conditions used were chosen to mimic aspects of the in vivo environment encountered by the pathogen once it enters a host: changes in temperature, osmolarity, oxygen, and iron concentration, as well as blood. In addition, the library was used to infect animals in three different models, and clones induced in these environments were identified. Several promoters were identified in multiple screens, and genes whose promoters were induced twofold or greater under the inducing condition were mutated to assess their roles in virulence. A total of 25 genes were mutated, and the effects of the mutations were assessed in at least two different infection models. Over 50% of these mutants were attenuated in at least one infection model. We show that DFI is a useful tool for identifying bacterial virulence factors as well as a means of elucidating the microenvironment encountered by pathogens upon infection.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology
Cited by
89 articles.
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