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Deletion of Polyamine Transport Protein PotD Exacerbates Virulence in Glaesserella (Haemophilus) parasuis in the Form of Non-biofilm-generated Bacteria in a Murine Acute Infection Model

Polyamines are small, polycationic molecules with a hydrocarbon backbone and multiple amino groups required for optimal cell growth. The potD gene, belonging to the ABC (ATP-binding cassette) transport system potABCD, encodes the bacterial substrate-binding subunit of the polyamine transport system,...

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Autores principales: Dai, Ke, Yang, Zhen, Ma, Xiaoyu, Chang, Yung-Fu, Cao, Sanjie, Zhao, Qin, Huang, Xiaobo, Wu, Rui, Huang, Yong, Xia, Jing, Yan, Qigui, Han, Xinfeng, Ma, Xiaoping, Wen, Xintian, Wen, Yiping
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Taylor & Francis 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7872090/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33525975
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/21505594.2021.1878673
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author Dai, Ke
Yang, Zhen
Ma, Xiaoyu
Chang, Yung-Fu
Cao, Sanjie
Zhao, Qin
Huang, Xiaobo
Wu, Rui
Huang, Yong
Xia, Jing
Yan, Qigui
Han, Xinfeng
Ma, Xiaoping
Wen, Xintian
Wen, Yiping
author_facet Dai, Ke
Yang, Zhen
Ma, Xiaoyu
Chang, Yung-Fu
Cao, Sanjie
Zhao, Qin
Huang, Xiaobo
Wu, Rui
Huang, Yong
Xia, Jing
Yan, Qigui
Han, Xinfeng
Ma, Xiaoping
Wen, Xintian
Wen, Yiping
author_sort Dai, Ke
collection PubMed
description Polyamines are small, polycationic molecules with a hydrocarbon backbone and multiple amino groups required for optimal cell growth. The potD gene, belonging to the ABC (ATP-binding cassette) transport system potABCD, encodes the bacterial substrate-binding subunit of the polyamine transport system, playing a pivotal role in bacterial metabolism and growth. The swine pathogen Glaesserella parasuis possesses an intact pot operon, and the studies presented here mainly examined the involvement of PotD in Glaesserella pathogenesis. A potD-deficient mutant was constructed using a virulent G. parasuis strain SC1401 by natural transformation; immuno-electron microscopy was used to identify the subcellular location of native PotD protein; an electron microscope was adopted to inspect biofilm and bacterial morphology; immunofluorescence technique was employed to study cellular adhesion, the levels of inflammation and apoptosis. The TSA++-pre-cultured mutant strain showed a significantly reduced adhesion capacity to PK-15 and MLE-12 cells. Likewise, we also found attenuation in virulence using murine models focusing on the clinical sign, H&E, and IFA for inflammation and apoptosis. However, when the mutant was grown in TSB++, virulence recovered to normal levels, along with a high level of radical oxygen species formation in the host. The expression of PotD could actively stimulate the production of ROS in Raw 264.7. Our data suggested that PotD from G. parasuis has a high binding potential to polyamine, and is essential for the full bacterial virulence within mouse models. However, the virulence of the potD mutant is highly dependent on its TSA++ culture conditions rather than on biofilm-formation.
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spelling pubmed-78720902021-02-26 Deletion of Polyamine Transport Protein PotD Exacerbates Virulence in Glaesserella (Haemophilus) parasuis in the Form of Non-biofilm-generated Bacteria in a Murine Acute Infection Model Dai, Ke Yang, Zhen Ma, Xiaoyu Chang, Yung-Fu Cao, Sanjie Zhao, Qin Huang, Xiaobo Wu, Rui Huang, Yong Xia, Jing Yan, Qigui Han, Xinfeng Ma, Xiaoping Wen, Xintian Wen, Yiping Virulence Research Paper Polyamines are small, polycationic molecules with a hydrocarbon backbone and multiple amino groups required for optimal cell growth. The potD gene, belonging to the ABC (ATP-binding cassette) transport system potABCD, encodes the bacterial substrate-binding subunit of the polyamine transport system, playing a pivotal role in bacterial metabolism and growth. The swine pathogen Glaesserella parasuis possesses an intact pot operon, and the studies presented here mainly examined the involvement of PotD in Glaesserella pathogenesis. A potD-deficient mutant was constructed using a virulent G. parasuis strain SC1401 by natural transformation; immuno-electron microscopy was used to identify the subcellular location of native PotD protein; an electron microscope was adopted to inspect biofilm and bacterial morphology; immunofluorescence technique was employed to study cellular adhesion, the levels of inflammation and apoptosis. The TSA++-pre-cultured mutant strain showed a significantly reduced adhesion capacity to PK-15 and MLE-12 cells. Likewise, we also found attenuation in virulence using murine models focusing on the clinical sign, H&E, and IFA for inflammation and apoptosis. However, when the mutant was grown in TSB++, virulence recovered to normal levels, along with a high level of radical oxygen species formation in the host. The expression of PotD could actively stimulate the production of ROS in Raw 264.7. Our data suggested that PotD from G. parasuis has a high binding potential to polyamine, and is essential for the full bacterial virulence within mouse models. However, the virulence of the potD mutant is highly dependent on its TSA++ culture conditions rather than on biofilm-formation. Taylor & Francis 2021-02-02 /pmc/articles/PMC7872090/ /pubmed/33525975 http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/21505594.2021.1878673 Text en © 2021 The Author(s). Published by Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Paper
Dai, Ke
Yang, Zhen
Ma, Xiaoyu
Chang, Yung-Fu
Cao, Sanjie
Zhao, Qin
Huang, Xiaobo
Wu, Rui
Huang, Yong
Xia, Jing
Yan, Qigui
Han, Xinfeng
Ma, Xiaoping
Wen, Xintian
Wen, Yiping
Deletion of Polyamine Transport Protein PotD Exacerbates Virulence in Glaesserella (Haemophilus) parasuis in the Form of Non-biofilm-generated Bacteria in a Murine Acute Infection Model
title Deletion of Polyamine Transport Protein PotD Exacerbates Virulence in Glaesserella (Haemophilus) parasuis in the Form of Non-biofilm-generated Bacteria in a Murine Acute Infection Model
title_full Deletion of Polyamine Transport Protein PotD Exacerbates Virulence in Glaesserella (Haemophilus) parasuis in the Form of Non-biofilm-generated Bacteria in a Murine Acute Infection Model
title_fullStr Deletion of Polyamine Transport Protein PotD Exacerbates Virulence in Glaesserella (Haemophilus) parasuis in the Form of Non-biofilm-generated Bacteria in a Murine Acute Infection Model
title_full_unstemmed Deletion of Polyamine Transport Protein PotD Exacerbates Virulence in Glaesserella (Haemophilus) parasuis in the Form of Non-biofilm-generated Bacteria in a Murine Acute Infection Model
title_short Deletion of Polyamine Transport Protein PotD Exacerbates Virulence in Glaesserella (Haemophilus) parasuis in the Form of Non-biofilm-generated Bacteria in a Murine Acute Infection Model
title_sort deletion of polyamine transport protein potd exacerbates virulence in glaesserella (haemophilus) parasuis in the form of non-biofilm-generated bacteria in a murine acute infection model
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7872090/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33525975
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/21505594.2021.1878673
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