Abstract

Clostridium difficile is a global health burden and the leading cause of antibiotic-associated diarrhoea worldwide, causing severe gastrointestinal disease and death. Three well characterised toxins are encoded by this bacterium in two genetic loci, specifically, TcdB (toxin B) and TcdA (toxin A) in the Pathogenicity Locus (PaLoc) and binary toxin (CDT) in the genomically distinct CDT locus (CdtLoc). Toxin production is controlled by regulators specific to each locus. The orphan response regulator, CdtR, encoded within the CdtLoc, up-regulates CDT production. Until now there has been no suggestion that CdtR influences TcdA and TcdB production since it is not carried by all PaLoc-containing strains and CdtLoc is not linked genetically to PaLoc. Here we show that, in addition to CDT, CdtR regulates TcdA and TcdB production but that this effect is strain dependent. Of clinical relevance, CdtR increased the production of TcdA, TcdB and CDT in two epidemic ribotype 027 human strains, modulating their virulence in a mouse infection model. Strains traditionally from animal lineages, notably ribotype 078 strains, are increasingly being isolated from humans and their genetic and phenotypic analysis is critical for future studies on this important pathogen. Here we show that CdtR-mediated toxin regulation did not occur in other strain backgrounds, including a ribotype 078 animal strain. The finding that toxin gene regulation is strain dependent highlights the regulatory diversity between C. difficile isolates and the importance of studying virulence regulation in diverse lineages and clinically relevant strains. Our work provides the first evidence that TcdA, TcdB and CDT production is linked by a common regulatory mechanism and that CdtR may act as a global regulator of virulence in epidemic 027 strains.

Highlights

  • C. difficile antibiotic-associated diarrhoea is a toxin mediated disease [1,2]

  • Our work provides the first evidence that TcdA, TcdB and CDT production is linked by a common regulatory mechanism and that CdtR may act as a global regulator of virulence in epidemic 027 strains

  • The TcdB, TcdA and binary toxins produced by C. difficile are encoded in two genomically distinct loci: TcdB and TcdA in the Pathogenicity Locus (PaLoc) and binary toxin (CDT) in the CDT locus (CdtLoc)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

TcdA, TcdB and CDT are secreted into the colonic epithelium by this bacterium, leading to diarrhoea that can progress to serious, life threatening inflammatory diseases, including pseudomembranous colitis and toxic megacolon [3]. The production of these toxins varies between strains. TcdB is the most commonly encoded toxin and is most often co-located with the TcdA gene in the PaLoc region [4], both toxins act as monoglucosyltransferases that irreversibly modify Rho family members [3]. CdtLoc is not carried by all PaLoc-containing strains and it is not linked genetically to PaLoc

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call