Abstract

Avian pathogenic Escherichia coli (APEC), an extraintestinal pathogenic E. coli (ExPEC), is the causative agent of avian colibacillosis, a disease that causes huge economic losses in the poultry industry and is characterized by infection through respiratory tract colonization followed by bacteraemia. A previous study in our lab demonstrated that phiv142-3 enhanced the survival ability of APEC strain DE142 in chickens serum. However, the mechanism of this affect has not been completely revealed. Here, we analyzed the transcriptional level of the prophage phiv142-3 region in DE142 when grown in chicken serum. Several upregulated genes attracted our attention, and a series of mutants were constructed. Deletion of orf6 or orf10 from phiv142-3 led to lower yields compared with WT after cultivation in serum for 10 h (P < 0.05). Furthermore, avian infection assays showed that compared with WT, the bacterial loads in blood and heart tissue of chickens challenged with DE142Δorf6 were decreased to 3.9 and 13%, while the bacterial burden in blood and heart from chickens infected with DE142Δorf10 was decreased to 7.2 and 8%, respectively (P < 0.05). DE142Δorf6 showed an obviously attenuated growth rate in the logarithmic phase when cultured in iron-deficient medium, and the transcription level of the iutA gene decreased to 43% (P < 0.05). The bactericidal assays showed that the survival of the mutant DE142Δorf10 was ~60% compared with WT in 50% chicken serum. The K1 capsule-related genes (kpsF, kpsE, kpsC, and kpsM) were down-regulated nearly 2-fold in DE142Δorf10 (P < 0.01). Together, these results suggested that orf6 affects growth by contributing to the uptake ability of iron, while orf10 increases resistance to serum by upregulating K1 capsule-related genes.

Highlights

  • The viruses that infect bacteria, known as bacteriophages, are the most abundant biological entity on Earth, with an estimated global population of 1031 [1]

  • Compared with with ampicillin (WT), the transcription levels of iutA decreased to 43% in DE142 orf6, while the other genes showed no significant differences between DE142 orf6 and WT (Figure 2C)

  • The K1 capsule is reported to participate in bacterial resistance to serum [23]

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Summary

Introduction

The viruses that infect bacteria, known as bacteriophages (phages), are the most abundant biological entity on Earth, with an estimated global population of 1031 [1] They play a crucial role in controlling bacterial populations through phagemediated killing and the formation of prophages whose DNA inserts into the bacterial genome or is maintained as an episome after infecting bacteria. From the perspective of evolution, it is advantageous for prophages to encode genes that promote fitness of the bacterial host. The lysogenic strain E. coli MG1655 ( Min27) grows faster than MG1655 (without the prophage Min27) [10]. Recent studies have pointed out that prophages increase the competitive fitness of lysogenic hosts and play important roles in bacterial diseases [15,16,17,18]

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