AI Article Synopsis

  • - Haemophilus influenzae, a common bacteria in humans, shows that its ability to use l-lactate can impact its survival rates in the body, especially concerning serum resistance and colonization in mice.
  • - Research focused on two strains (NTHi 2019 and Rd KW20) revealed that genetic deletions related to lactate metabolism affected their survival differently, with NTHi 2019 showing no lactate-dependent serum resistance.
  • - The study also found complex regulatory mechanisms for lactate utilization, highlighting that while l-lactate serves as an important nutrient, it may also act as a signaling molecule that influences growth and survival in different conditions.

Article Abstract

Haemophilus influenzae is a Gram-negative bacillus and a frequent commensal of the human nasopharynx. Earlier work demonstrated that in H. influenzae type b, l-lactate metabolism is associated with serum resistance and in vivo survival of the organism. To further gain insight into lactate utilization of the non-typeable (NTHi) isolate 2019 and laboratory prototype strain Rd KW20, deletion mutants of the l-lactate dehydrogenase (lctD) and permease (lctP) were generated and characterized. It is shown, that the apparent KM of l-lactate uptake is 20.1μM as determined for strain Rd KW20. Comparison of the COPD isolate NTHi 2019-R with the corresponding lctP knockout strain for survival in human serum revealed no lactate dependent serum resistance. In contrast, we observed a 4-fold attenuation of the mutant strain in a murine model of nasopharyngeal colonization. Characterization of lctP transcriptional control shows that the lactate utilization system in H. influenzae is not an inductor inducible system. Rather negative feedback regulation was observed in the presence of l-lactate and this is dependent on the ArcAB regulatory system. Additionally, for 2019 it was found that lactate may have signaling function leading to increased cell growth in late log phase under conditions where no l-lactate is metabolized. This effect seems to be ArcA independent and was not observed in strain Rd KW20. We conclude that l-lactate is an important carbon-source and may act as host specific signal substrate which fine tunes the globally acting ArcAB regulon and may additionally affect a yet unknown signaling system and thus may contribute to enhanced in vivo survival.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4012139PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijmm.2014.02.010DOI Listing

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