Simulated colonic fluid replicates the in vivo growth capabilities of Citrobacter rodentium cpxRA mutants and uncovers additive effects of Cpx regulated genes on fitness

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Abstract

Citrobacter rodentium is an attaching and effacing (A/E) pathogen used to model enteropathogenic and enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli infections in mice. During colonization, C. rodentium must adapt to stresses in the gastrointestinal tract such as antimicrobial peptides, pH changes, and bile salts. The Cpx envelope stress response (ESR) is a two-component system used by some bacteria to remediate stress by modulating gene expression and is necessary for C. rodentium pathogenesis in mice. Here, we utilized simulated colonic fluid (SCF) to mimic the gastrointestinal environment which we show strongly induces the Cpx ESR and highlights a fitness defect specific to the Δ cpxRA mutant. While investigating genes in the Cpx regulon that may contribute to C. rodentium pathogenesis, we found that the absence of the Cpx ESR resulted in higher expression of the LEE master regulator, ler , and the genes yebE, ygiB, bssR , and htpX relied on CpxRA for proper expression. We then determined that CpxRA and select gene mutants were essential for proper growth in SCF when in the presence of extraneous stressors and in competition. Although none of the Cpx-regulated gene mutants exhibited marked virulence phenotypes in vivo , the Δ cpxRA mutant had reduced colonization and attenuated virulence, as previously determined, which replicated the in vitro growth phenotypes specific to SCF. Overall, these results indicate that the Δ cpxRA virulence defect is not due to any single Cpx regulon gene examined. Instead, attenuation may be the result of defective growth in the colonic environment resulting from the collective impact of multiple Cpx-regulated genes.

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License: CC-BY-NC-ND-4.0