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From Grazing Resistance to Pathogenesis: The Coincidental Evolution of Virulence Factors

To many pathogenic bacteria, human hosts are an evolutionary dead end. This begs the question what evolutionary forces have shaped their virulence traits. Why are these bacteria so virulent? The coincidental evolution hypothesis suggests that such virulence factors result from adaptation to other ec...

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Autores principales: Adiba, Sandrine, Nizak, Clément, van Baalen, Minus, Denamur, Erick, Depaulis, Frantz
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2920306/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20711443
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0011882
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author Adiba, Sandrine
Nizak, Clément
van Baalen, Minus
Denamur, Erick
Depaulis, Frantz
author_facet Adiba, Sandrine
Nizak, Clément
van Baalen, Minus
Denamur, Erick
Depaulis, Frantz
author_sort Adiba, Sandrine
collection PubMed
description To many pathogenic bacteria, human hosts are an evolutionary dead end. This begs the question what evolutionary forces have shaped their virulence traits. Why are these bacteria so virulent? The coincidental evolution hypothesis suggests that such virulence factors result from adaptation to other ecological niches. In particular, virulence traits in bacteria might result from selective pressure exerted by protozoan predator. Thus, grazing resistance may be an evolutionarily exaptation for bacterial pathogenicity. This hypothesis was tested by subjecting a well characterized collection of 31 Escherichia coli strains (human commensal or extra-intestinal pathogenic) to grazing by the social haploid amoeba Dictyostelium discoideum. We then assessed how resistance to grazing correlates with some bacterial traits, such as the presence of virulence genes. Whatever the relative population size (bacteria/amoeba) for a non-pathogenic bacteria strain, D. discoideum was able to phagocytise, digest and grow. In contrast, a pathogenic bacterium strain killed D. discoideum above a certain bacteria/amoeba population size. A plating assay was then carried out using the E. coli collection faced to the grazing of D. discoideum. E. coli strains carrying virulence genes such as iroN, irp2, fyuA involved in iron uptake, belonging to the B2 phylogenetic group and being virulent in a mouse model of septicaemia were resistant to the grazing from D. discoideum. Experimental proof of the key role of the irp gene in the grazing resistance was evidenced with a mutant strain lacking this gene. Such determinant of virulence may well be originally selected and (or) further maintained for their role in natural habitat: resistance to digestion by free-living protozoa, rather than for virulence per se.
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spelling pubmed-29203062010-08-13 From Grazing Resistance to Pathogenesis: The Coincidental Evolution of Virulence Factors Adiba, Sandrine Nizak, Clément van Baalen, Minus Denamur, Erick Depaulis, Frantz PLoS One Research Article To many pathogenic bacteria, human hosts are an evolutionary dead end. This begs the question what evolutionary forces have shaped their virulence traits. Why are these bacteria so virulent? The coincidental evolution hypothesis suggests that such virulence factors result from adaptation to other ecological niches. In particular, virulence traits in bacteria might result from selective pressure exerted by protozoan predator. Thus, grazing resistance may be an evolutionarily exaptation for bacterial pathogenicity. This hypothesis was tested by subjecting a well characterized collection of 31 Escherichia coli strains (human commensal or extra-intestinal pathogenic) to grazing by the social haploid amoeba Dictyostelium discoideum. We then assessed how resistance to grazing correlates with some bacterial traits, such as the presence of virulence genes. Whatever the relative population size (bacteria/amoeba) for a non-pathogenic bacteria strain, D. discoideum was able to phagocytise, digest and grow. In contrast, a pathogenic bacterium strain killed D. discoideum above a certain bacteria/amoeba population size. A plating assay was then carried out using the E. coli collection faced to the grazing of D. discoideum. E. coli strains carrying virulence genes such as iroN, irp2, fyuA involved in iron uptake, belonging to the B2 phylogenetic group and being virulent in a mouse model of septicaemia were resistant to the grazing from D. discoideum. Experimental proof of the key role of the irp gene in the grazing resistance was evidenced with a mutant strain lacking this gene. Such determinant of virulence may well be originally selected and (or) further maintained for their role in natural habitat: resistance to digestion by free-living protozoa, rather than for virulence per se. Public Library of Science 2010-08-11 /pmc/articles/PMC2920306/ /pubmed/20711443 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0011882 Text en Adiba et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Adiba, Sandrine
Nizak, Clément
van Baalen, Minus
Denamur, Erick
Depaulis, Frantz
From Grazing Resistance to Pathogenesis: The Coincidental Evolution of Virulence Factors
title From Grazing Resistance to Pathogenesis: The Coincidental Evolution of Virulence Factors
title_full From Grazing Resistance to Pathogenesis: The Coincidental Evolution of Virulence Factors
title_fullStr From Grazing Resistance to Pathogenesis: The Coincidental Evolution of Virulence Factors
title_full_unstemmed From Grazing Resistance to Pathogenesis: The Coincidental Evolution of Virulence Factors
title_short From Grazing Resistance to Pathogenesis: The Coincidental Evolution of Virulence Factors
title_sort from grazing resistance to pathogenesis: the coincidental evolution of virulence factors
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2920306/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20711443
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0011882
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