Abstract

Avian pathogenic Escherichia coli (APEC) can spread beyond the intestines and cause systemic infections, leading to various clinical manifestations, including airsacculitis, pericarditis, perihepatitis and colisepticemia. The mechanisms facilitating this extraintestinal infections are not fully understood. In this study, we investigate how the tolA gene affects APEC virulence by encoding a protein involved in maintaining outer membrane integrity. We constructed a tolA deletion mutant of APEC strain E058 and evaluated its growth and survival in various environments, including in vitro cultures and in vivo infection models in chickens. We found that the motility-defective ΔtolA mutant exhibits reduced biofilm formation ability and weakened resistance to the environmental stresses, suggesting an important role for TolA in APEC's survival. The lack of tolA gene affects the bacterial ability to resist the host's immune system, such as complement-mediated serum killing or phagocytosis, as shown by the serum killing and macrophage phagocytosis assays. Additionally, in vivo infection studies using chickens demonstrated that the ΔtolA mutant displayed attenuated virulence, evidenced by reduced mortality and lower tissue bacterial burden. Reverse transcription quantitative real-time PCR (RT-qPCR) analysis revealed that inactivation of tolA led to downregulation of virulence genes associated with serum resistance (traT) and flagellar biosynthesis (fliR). Taken together, our findings demonstrate the multifaceted role of TolA protein in promoting the survival, immune evasion, biofilm formation, and virulence of APEC E058. This suggests that targeting TolA could potentially offer new strategies for combating APEC infections.

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