Affiliation:
1. Departamento de Genética, Facultad de Biologı́a, Universidad de Sevilla, 41080 Seville,1 and
2. Centro de Biologı́a Molecular “Severo Ochoa,” CSIC-Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, 28049 Madrid,2 Spain, and
3. Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Department of Molecular Microbiology, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri 63110-10933
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Salmonella enterica
serovar Typhimurium proliferates within cultured epithelial and macrophage cells. Intracellular bacterial proliferation is, however, restricted within normal fibroblast cells. To characterize this phenomenon in detail, we investigated the possibility that the pathogen itself might contribute to attenuating the intracellular growth rate.
S
.
enterica
serovar Typhimurium mutants were selected in normal rat kidney fibroblasts displaying an increased intracellular proliferation rate. These mutants harbored loss-of-function mutations in the virulence-related regulatory genes
phoQ
,
rpoS
,
slyA
, and
spvR
. Lack of a functional PhoP-PhoQ system caused the most dramatic change in the intracellular growth rate.
phoP-
and
phoQ
-null mutants exhibited an intracellular growth rate 20- to 30-fold higher than that of the wild-type strain. This result showed that the PhoP-PhoQ system exerts a master regulatory function for preventing bacterial overgrowth within fibroblasts. In addition, an overgrowing clone was isolated harboring a mutation in a previously unknown serovar Typhimurium open reading frame, named
igaA
for intracellular growth attenuator. Mutations in other serovar Typhimurium virulence genes, such as
ompR
,
dam
,
crp
,
cya
,
mviA
,
spiR (ssrA)
,
spiA
, and
rpoE
, did not result in pathogen intracellular overgrowth. Nonetheless, lack of either SpiA or the alternate sigma factor RpoE led to a substantial decrease in intracellular bacterial viability. These results prove for the first time that specific serovar Typhimurium virulence regulators are involved in a response designed to attenuate the intracellular growth rate within a nonphagocytic host cell. This growth-attenuating response is accompanied by functions that ensure the viability of intracellular bacteria.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology