Abstract

BackgroundVibrio anguillarum is an extracellular bacterial pathogen that is a causative agent of vibriosis in finfish and crustaceans with mortality rates ranging from 30% to 100%. Mutations in central metabolism (glycolysis and the TCA cycle) of intracellular pathogens often result in attenuated virulence due to depletion of required metabolic intermediates; however, it was not known whether mutations in central metabolism would affect virulence in an extracellular pathogen such as V. anguillarum.ResultsSeven central metabolism mutants were created and characterized with regard to growth in minimal and complex media, expression of virulence genes, and virulence in juvenile rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss). Only the isocitrate dehydrogenase (icd) mutant was attenuated in virulence against rainbow trout challenged by either intraperitoneal injection or immersion. Further, the icd mutant was shown to be immunoprotective against wild type V. anguillarum infection. There was no significant decrease in the expression of the three hemolysin genes detected by qRT-PCR. Additionally, only the icd mutant exhibited a significantly decreased growth yield in complex media. Growth yield was directly related to the abundance of glutamate. A strain with a restored wild type icd gene was created and shown to restore growth to a wild type cell density in complex media and pathogenicity in rainbow trout.ConclusionsThe data strongly suggest that a decreased growth yield, resulting from the inability to synthesize α-ketoglutarate, caused the attenuation despite normal levels of expression of virulence genes. Therefore, the ability of an extracellular pathogen to cause disease is dependent upon the availability of host-supplied nutrients for growth. Additionally, a live vaccine strain could be created from an icd deletion strain.

Highlights

  • Vibrio anguillarum is an extracellular bacterial pathogen that is a causative agent of vibriosis in finfish and crustaceans with mortality rates ranging from 30% to 100%

  • A V. anguillarum mutant that lacks Histone-like Nucleoid-structuring (H-NS), a global transcriptional regulator that represses the transcription of vah1, plp, and rtxA, showed attenuation in virulence when injected intraperitoneally, suggesting that proper coordination of gene expression is an important factor during the post-invasion stage [8]

  • Of the central metabolism mutants, only the icd mutant showed strong attenuation in virulence, which did not result from a decrease in virulence factor expression

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Summary

Introduction

Vibrio anguillarum is an extracellular bacterial pathogen that is a causative agent of vibriosis in finfish and crustaceans with mortality rates ranging from 30% to 100%. V. anguillarum is an extracellular pathogen that invades its host fish through the intestine, skin or gills [4, 5]. Mutations in vah and/or plp resulted in slight attenuation against juvenile Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar); rtxA mutants were avirulent [7, 9, 11]. A V. anguillarum mutant that lacks H-NS, a global transcriptional regulator that represses the transcription of vah, plp, and rtxA, showed attenuation in virulence when injected intraperitoneally, suggesting that proper coordination of gene expression is an important factor during the post-invasion stage [8]

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