Abstract
Oral infection of Salmonella enterica serovar Enteritidis (SE) strains, SE #15, SE #26, and SE #56, isolated from poultry farms was performed with specific pathogen-free (SPF) 1-day-old chicks and 6 weeks-old BALB/c mice. SE #15 showed the strongest lethality to both chicks and mice, and SE #26 or #56 showed no effects on the survival of mice, while SE #26 showed little and SE #56 intermediate lethal effects to chicks. Using reverse transcriptation-PCR (RT-PCR), expression of pathogenic genes in these SE clones was examined; flagella (fliC), invading host cell (invA), Salmonella enterotoxin (stn) and DNA-binding protein from starved cells of Salmonella (sep22) genes were expressed in SE #15 and SE #56, whereas invA was negative in SE #26. However sep22 was more weakly expressed in SE #26 and SE #56 than SE #15. Western blot analysis of total protein extracts of these SE strains revealed that SE #15 expressed highest levels of SEp22, while SE #26 and SE #56, significantly lower levels of this protein than SE#15. This study showed the extents of sep22 expression at mRNA as well as protein level correlated well with pathogenicity of SE clones to chicks and mice, and these results suggest that SEp22 is a new virulence factor in both chick and mouse.
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