The human gut microbiota plays a central role in intestinal health and disease. Yet, many of its bacterial constituents are functionally still largely unexplored. A crucial prerequisite for bacterial survival and proliferation is the creation and/or exploitation of an own niche.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAt the intestinal host-microbe interface, the transmembrane mucin MUC1 can function as a physical barrier as well as a receptor for bacteria. MUC1 also influences epithelial cell morphology and receptor function. Various bacterial pathogens can exploit integrins to infect eukaryotic cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe cellular invasion machinery of the enteric pathogen Salmonella consists of a type III secretion system (T3SS) with injectable virulence factors that induce uptake by macropinocytosis. Salmonella invasion at the apical surface of intestinal epithelial cells is inefficient, presumably because of a glycosylated barrier formed by transmembrane mucins that prevents T3SS contact with host cells. We observed that Salmonella is capable of apical invasion of intestinal epithelial cells that express the transmembrane mucin MUC1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe Gram-negative pathogen Campylobacter jejuni is the most common cause of bacterial foodborne disease worldwide. The mechanisms that lead to bacterial invasion of eukaryotic cells and massive intestinal inflammation are still unknown. In this study, we report that C.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe pathogen Campylobacter jejuni is the principal cause of bacterial food-borne infections. The mechanism(s) that contribute to bacterial survival and disease are still poorly understood. In other bacterial species, type VI secretion systems (T6SS) are increasingly recognized to contribute to bacterial pathogenesis by toxic effects on host cells or competing bacterial species.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Natural compounds with anti-microbial properties are attractive reagents to reduce the use of conventional antibiotics. Carvacrol, the main constituent of oregano oil, inhibits the growth of a variety of bacterial foodborne pathogens. As concentrations of carvacrol may vary in vivo or when used in animal feed, we here investigated the effect of subinhibitory concentrations of the compound on major virulence traits of the principal bacterial foodborne pathogen Campylobacter jejuni.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFVet Microbiol
December 2012
Little is known about the interactions of chicken host defense peptides (HDPs) with Campylobacter jejuni in young chicks. To examine the role of the chicken HDP, cathelicidin-2 (CATH-2) in host-pathogen interactions we challenged 4-day-old Ross 308 broilers with a chicken-derived C. jejuni isolate (WS356) and used the chicken pathogen Salmonella enterica Enteritidis phage type 4 (FGT1) as a reference.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFlagellin of Campylobacter jejuni is extensively modified with (derivatives of) pseudaminic acid. The flagellar glycosylation locus contains several genes with homopolymeric G-tracts prone to slipped-strand mispairing, some of which belong to the maf gene family. We investigated the function of the putative phase-variable maf4 gene of C.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBacterial alkaline phosphatases (PhoA) hydrolyse phosphate-containing substrates to provide the preferred phosphorus source inorganic phosphate (P(i)). Campylobacter jejuni does not contain a typical PhoA homologue but contains a phosphatase that is regulated by the two-component system PhosS/PhosR. Here we describe the characterization of the enzyme, its secretion pathway and its function in the bacterium's biology.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe bacterial pathogen Campylobacter jejuni invades mucosal cells via largely undefined and rather inefficient (0.01-2 bacteria per cell) mechanisms. Here we report a novel, highly efficient C.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCampylobacter jejuni is the prime cause of foodborne bacterial gastroenteritis. An important complication of C. jejuni enteritis is Guillain-Barré syndrome (GBS), an immune-mediated disorder of the peripheral nerve.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGiven the lack of functional transposons for use in Campylobacter spp., an alternative method of insertional mutagenesis using natural transformation was developed. High efficiencies of transformation were only obtained with species-specific DNA.
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