Abstract

Enterohemorrhagic Escherichia coli (EHEC) is a clinically relevant foodborne pathogen, resulting in over 95,000 cases of EHEC-associated illness and 60 deaths each year in the US alone. Since EHEC is a continuous global issue with new outbreaks constantly occurring, the development of new therapeutic strategies is vital to minimizing the cases of infection seen each year. A key aspect in new drug development is the identification of vulnerabilities in EHEC’s pathogenicity, in particular, during its transit through the human gastrointestinal (GI) tract. As EHEC passes through the human GI tract to its site of colonization in the large intestine, it faces a multitude of host assaults including acute acid stress in the stomach, bile salt stress and cationic antimicrobial peptide exposure in the small intestine, and short chain fatty acid (SCFA) stress in the large intestine. The research carried out in this doctoral dissertation focuses on understanding how EHEC senses chemical cues from the host’s innate immune responses and how this knowledge can be exploited to develop effective antimicrobial strategies. Our findings successfully demonstrate that a novel antimicrobial peptide ameliorates infection in a mouse model of infection by enhancing acid-induced pathogen killing during gastric passage, and that the DNAbinding protein, Dps, plays a significant role in protecting EHEC against peptide killing. Moreover, this research successfully shows that varying concentrations of SCFAs result in differential modulation of EHEC virulence – a finding that contributes to our understanding of the role of diet and commensal flora in host susceptibility to infection. Together the findings of this research demonstrate how the selected innate host defences throughout the human GI tract can be exploited and/or manipulated to effectively prevent infection by the human pathogen EHEC.

Highlights

  • 2.2.1 Acute Acid Stress and DNA damage 2.2.1.1 Acid Stress as a Defense MechanismFor enteric pathogens, the journey from ingestion to successful colonization of the host intestine represents a series of host assaults meant to act as a barrier to pathogen infection

  • 3.4.2 Peptide wrwycr behaves as a bactericidal antibiotic Survival assays of Escherichia coli (EHEC) EDL933 WT exposed to various antibiotics showed a 1.5-log fold increase in survival when exposed to the control media (MHB) containing no antibiotics and no change in survival when exposed to spectinomycin, a bacteriostatic antibiotic (Figure 3.3a)

  • We have successfully demonstrated that the DNA-binding protein, DNA-binding protein from starved cells (Dps), plays a vital protective role against peptide wrwycr treatment of EHEC through its DNA-binding and ferroxidase center activity

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Summary

Introduction

2.2.1 Acute Acid Stress and DNA damage 2.2.1.1 Acid Stress as a Defense MechanismFor enteric pathogens, the journey from ingestion to successful colonization of the host intestine represents a series of host assaults meant to act as a barrier to pathogen infection. Passage from the stomach into the small intestine provides a less extreme acidic environment, the presence of fermentation end products produced by the normal intestinal flora result in the presence of weak acids, thereby creating an environment ranging in pH from 4 to 6 (Lin et al, 1996) Acidic environments such as that encountered in the human stomach results in extreme toxicity that can be detrimental to enteric pathogens due to cytoplasmic acidification which leads to denaturation of macromolecules and disruption of enzymatic function (Calhoun and Kwon, 2011; Jeong et al, 2008; Lindahl and Nyberg, 1972; Smith, 2003). These damaging effects of acute acidity result in bacterial cell death and decrease the potential for successful colonization of the host intestine.

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