Abstract
AbstractSalmonella entericais a globally disseminated pathogen that is the cause of over 100 million infections per year. The resulting diseases caused byS. entericaare dependent upon host susceptibility and the infecting serovar. For example, Typhoid fever is a human exclusive disease caused byS. entericaserovar Typhi. AsS. entericaserovar Typhimurium induces a typhoid like disease in mice, this model has been used extensively to illuminate various aspects ofSalmonellainfection and host responses. However, the infection is so severe that even one infectious bacterium injected intravenously will cause mortality in 100% of animals within one week of infection. Due to this severity, researchers often use strains of mice resistant to infection or attenuatedSalmonellastrains to understand adaptive immunity and infection dynamics. Despite decades of research, many aspects ofSalmonellainfection and fundamental biology remain poorly understood. Here, we use a Transposon Insertion Sequencing (TIS) technique to interrogate the essential genomes of widely used isogenic wild-type and attenuatedS. Typhimurium strains. We reveal differential essential pathways between strains, provide a direct link between iron starvation, DNA synthesis and bacterial membrane integrity, and showS.Typhi andS.Typhimurium have similar requirements for iron.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory