Identification of meningococcal genes necessary for colonization of human upper airway tissue
Identification of meningococcal genes necessary for colonization of human upper airway tissue
Neisseria meningitidis is an exclusively human pathogen that has evolved primarily to colonize the nasopharynx rather than to cause systemic disease. Colonization is the most frequent outcome following meningococcal infection and a prerequisite for invasive disease. The mechanism of colonization involves attachment of the organism to epithelial cells via bacterial type IV pili (Tfp), but subsequent events during colonization remain largely unknown. We analyzed 576 N. meningitidis mutants for their capacity to colonize human nasopharyngeal tissue in an organ culture model to identify bacterial genes required for colonization. Eight colonization-defective mutants were isolated. Two mutants were unable to express Tfp and were defective for adhesion to epithelial cells, which is likely to be the basis of their attenuation in nasopharyngeal tissue. Three other mutants are predicted to have lost previously uncharacterized surface molecules, while the remaining mutants have transposon insertions in genes of unknown function. We have identified novel meningococcal colonization factors, and this should provide insights into the survival of this important pathogen in its natural habitat.
45-51
Exley, Rachel M.
1225b34c-ce03-4202-908d-8747e0ed149f
Sim, Richard
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Goodwin, Linda
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Winterbotham, Megan
56c258d6-632d-4e02-a0c1-b3c45809d4e2
Schneider, Muriel C.
fbcebb1c-3a69-4e40-85ac-afd3ba70fe90
Read, Robert C.
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Tang, Christoph M.
7bd4e37c-e448-46e0-acad-cfc7b455eed2
January 2009
Exley, Rachel M.
1225b34c-ce03-4202-908d-8747e0ed149f
Sim, Richard
408598eb-7848-492a-a792-f2bbd267a3fb
Goodwin, Linda
45c48038-ca4d-451a-9fbe-b4d6ea95048b
Winterbotham, Megan
56c258d6-632d-4e02-a0c1-b3c45809d4e2
Schneider, Muriel C.
fbcebb1c-3a69-4e40-85ac-afd3ba70fe90
Read, Robert C.
b5caca7b-0063-438a-b703-7ecbb6fc2b51
Tang, Christoph M.
7bd4e37c-e448-46e0-acad-cfc7b455eed2
Exley, Rachel M., Sim, Richard, Goodwin, Linda, Winterbotham, Megan, Schneider, Muriel C., Read, Robert C. and Tang, Christoph M.
(2009)
Identification of meningococcal genes necessary for colonization of human upper airway tissue.
Infection and Immunity, 77 (1), .
(doi:10.1128/?IAI.00968-08).
(PMID:18936183)
Abstract
Neisseria meningitidis is an exclusively human pathogen that has evolved primarily to colonize the nasopharynx rather than to cause systemic disease. Colonization is the most frequent outcome following meningococcal infection and a prerequisite for invasive disease. The mechanism of colonization involves attachment of the organism to epithelial cells via bacterial type IV pili (Tfp), but subsequent events during colonization remain largely unknown. We analyzed 576 N. meningitidis mutants for their capacity to colonize human nasopharyngeal tissue in an organ culture model to identify bacterial genes required for colonization. Eight colonization-defective mutants were isolated. Two mutants were unable to express Tfp and were defective for adhesion to epithelial cells, which is likely to be the basis of their attenuation in nasopharyngeal tissue. Three other mutants are predicted to have lost previously uncharacterized surface molecules, while the remaining mutants have transposon insertions in genes of unknown function. We have identified novel meningococcal colonization factors, and this should provide insights into the survival of this important pathogen in its natural habitat.
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Published date: January 2009
Organisations:
Clinical & Experimental Sciences
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Local EPrints ID: 346817
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/346817
ISSN: 0019-9567
PURE UUID: a6102929-dcf6-44b6-b19c-a4fafffe2c5a
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Date deposited: 11 Jan 2013 10:10
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:42
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Author:
Rachel M. Exley
Author:
Richard Sim
Author:
Linda Goodwin
Author:
Megan Winterbotham
Author:
Muriel C. Schneider
Author:
Christoph M. Tang
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