Affiliation:
1. Department of Oral Biology, Rutgers School of Dental Medicine, Rutgers University, Newark, New Jersey, USA
2. Department of Cancer Biology & Pharmacology, University of Illinois College of Medicine at Peoria, Peoria, Illinois, USA
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Kingella kingae
is a human oral bacterium that can cause diseases of the skeletal system in children and infective endocarditis in children and adults.
K. kingae
produces a toxin of the RTX group, RtxA. To investigate the role of RtxA in disease pathogenesis
in vivo
,
K. kingae
strain PYKK081 and its isogenic RtxA-deficient strain KKNB100 were tested for their virulence and pathological consequences upon intraperitoneal injections in 7-day-postnatal (PN 7) rats. At the doses above 8.0 × 10
6
cells/animal, PYKK081 was able to cause a fatal illness, resulting in rapid weight loss, bacteremia, and abdominal necrotic lesion formation. Significant histopathology was observed in thymus, spleen, and bone marrow. Strain KKNB100 was less toxic to animals. Neither weight loss, bacteremia, nor histopathological changes were evident. Animals injected with KKNB100 exhibited a significantly elevated circulating white blood cell (WBC) count, whereas animals injected with PYKK081 had a WBC count that resembled that of the uninfected control. This observation parallels the subtleties associated with clinical presentation of
K. kingae
disease in humans and suggests that the toxin contributes to WBC depletion. Thus, our results demonstrate that RtxA is a key
K. kingae
virulence factor. Furthermore, our findings suggest that the PN 7 rat can serve as a useful model for understanding disease caused by
K. kingae
and for elucidating diagnostic parameters in human patients.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology
Cited by
33 articles.
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