Affiliation:
1. Biophysics Division,1
2. Electron Microscopy Division,2 and
3. Human Genetics Department,3 Indian Institute of Chemical Biology, Jadavpur, Calcutta-700 032, India
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Evidence suggests that a repertoire of
Vibrio cholerae
genes are differentially expressed in vivo, and regulation of virulence factors in vivo may follow a different pathway. Our work was aimed at characterization of in vivo-grown bacteria and identification of genes that are differentially expressed following infection by RNA arbitrarily primed (RAP)-PCR fingerprinting. The ligated rabbit ileal loop model was used. The motility of in vivo-grown bacteria increased by 350% over that of in vitro-grown bacteria. Also, the in vivo-grown cells were more resistant to killing by human serum. By using the RAP-PCR strategy, five differentially expressed transcripts were identified. Two in vitro-induced transcripts encoded polypeptides for the leucine tRNA synthatase and the 50S ribosomal protein, and the three in vivo-induced transcripts encoded the SucA and MurE proteins and a polypeptide of unknown function. MurE is a protein involved in the peptidoglycan biosynthetic pathway. The lytic profiles of in vivo- and in vitro-grown cells suspended in distilled water were compared; the former was found to be slightly less sensitive to lysis. Ultrathin sections of both cells observed under the transmission electron microscope revealed that in contrast to the usual wavy discontinuous membrane structure of the in vitro-grown cells, in vivo-grown cells had a more rigid, clearly visible double-layered structure. The
V. cholerae murE
gene was cloned and sequenced. The sequence contained an open reading frame of 1,488 nucleotides with its own ribosome-binding site. A plasmid containing the
murE
gene of
V. cholerae
was transformed into
V. cholerae
569B, and a transformed strain, 569BME, containing the plasmid was obtained. Ultrathin sections of 569BME viewed under a transmission electron microscope revealed a slightly more rigid cell wall than that of wild-type 569B. When
V. cholerae
569B and 569BME cells were injected separately into ligated rabbit ileal loops, the transformed cells had a preference for growth in the ileal loops versus laboratory conditions.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology
Cited by
24 articles.
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