Abstract

Mutants of Shigella flexneri defective in aerobactin-mediated iron transport were assayed for virulence in several model systems. A Tn5 insertion mutant was invasive in HeLa cells, lethal in the chicken embryo, and produced keratoconjunctivitis in the guinea pig, indicating little or no loss of ability to invade and multiply intracellularly. Although the mutant failed to grow in low-iron medium in vitro, growth equivalent to that of the wild type was observed in HeLa cell lysates. Thus, there appears to be sufficient available iron inside the HeLa cell to allow growth in the absence of siderophore synthesis. Possible host iron sources were tested, and both the mutant and wild type utilized hemin or hematin as a sole source of iron. Only the wild-type, aerobactin-producing strain could remove iron from transferrin or lactoferrin. Two deletion mutants were also assayed for virulence and were found to be avirulent for the chicken embryo. These deletions encompass flanking sequences as well as the aerobactin genes; therefore, adjacent genes may be required for virulence.

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