Elsevier

Microbes and Infection

Volume 9, Issue 11, September 2007, Pages 1316-1324
Microbes and Infection

Original article
Cell attachment properties and infectivity of host-adapted and environmentally adapted Citrobacter rodentium

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.micinf.2007.06.006Get rights and content
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Abstract

Citrobacter rodentium belongs to a family of extracellular enteric pathogens that include enterohaemorrhagic and enteropathogenic Escherichia coli, which colonises the gastrointestinal mucosa by the attaching and effacing (A/E) mechanism. We previously described the appearance of a ‘hyper-infectious’ state after passage of C. rodentium through the murine gastrointestinal tract. Here we report that host-adapted C. rodentium is able to efficiently adhere and trigger actin polymerisation on cultured epithelial cells. Consistent with these observations we recorded higher levels of expression of genes carried on the LEE pathogenicity island and type III secretion system effector genes carried on prophages compared with in vitro-grown bacteria; importantly, the level of ler gene expression was unchanged. These phenotypes were lost after shed C. rodentium was adapted to the external environment. Upon exposure of C57Bl/6 mice, environmentally adapted C. rodentium was no longer infectious at the low doses associated with host-adapted bacteria and the bacteria were found to be localised in the caecal patch in a similar way to C. rodentium cultured in laboratory media. Thus, the ‘hyper-infectious’ host-adapted state, allowing efficient transmission and colonisation of naive hosts, is transient in nature and gradually lost after shedding into the environment.

Keywords

Citrobacter rodentium
Enteropathogenic E. coli
Enterohaemorrhagic E. coli; Infection
Transmission

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1

Current address: Department of Molecular Biology and Microbiology, Tufts University, 150 Harrison Avenue, Boston, MA 02111, USA