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- W2056518123 abstract "Avian pathogenic Escherichia coli (APEC) and uropathogenic E. coli (UPEC) are the two main subsets of extraintestinal pathogenic E. coli (ExPEC). Both types have multiple iron acquisition systems, including heme and siderophores. Although iron transport systems involved in the pathogenesis of APEC or UPEC have been documented individually in corresponding animal models, the contribution of these systems during simultaneous APEC and UPEC infection is not well described. To determine the contribution of each individual iron acquisition system to the virulence of APEC and UPEC, isogenic mutants affecting iron uptake in APEC E058 and UPEC U17 were constructed and compared in a chicken challenge model. Salmochelin-defective mutants E058Δ iroD and U17Δ iroD showed significantly decreased pathogenicity compared to the wild-type strains. Aerobactin defective mutants E058Δ iucD and U17Δ iucD demonstrated reduced colonization in several internal organs, whereas the heme defective mutants E058Δ chuT and U17Δ chuT colonized internal organs to the same extent as their wild-type strains. The triple mutant Δ chuT Δ iroD Δ iucD in both E058 and U17 showed decreased pathogenicity compared to each of the single mutants. The histopathological lesions in visceral organs of birds challenged with the wild-type strains were more severe than those from birds challenged with Δ iroD, Δ iucD or the triple mutants. Conversely, chickens inoculated with the Δ chuT mutants had lesions comparable to those in chickens inoculated with the wild-type strains. However, no significant differences were observed between the mutants and the wild-type strains in resistance to serum, cellular invasion and intracellular survival in HD-11, and growth in iron-rich or iron-restricted medium. Results indicated that APEC and UPEC utilize similar iron acquisition mechanisms in chickens. Both salmochelin and aerobactin systems appeared to be important in APEC and UPEC virulence, while salmochelin contributed more to the virulence. Heme bounded by ChuT in the periplasm appeared to be redundant in this model, indicating that other periplasmic binding proteins likely contributed to the observed no phenotype for the heme uptake mutant. No differences were observed between the mutants and their wild-type parents in other phenotypic traits, suggesting that other virulence mechanisms compensate for the effect of the mutations." @default.
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- W2056518123 date "2012-01-01" @default.
- W2056518123 modified "2023-10-01" @default.
- W2056518123 title "Roles of iron acquisition systems in virulence of extraintestinal pathogenic Escherichia coli: salmochelin and aerobactin contribute more to virulence than heme in a chicken infection model" @default.
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- W2056518123 doi "https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2180-12-143" @default.
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