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Genes Contributing to Fitness in Abscess and Epithelial Cell Colonization Environments. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study focuses on understanding how a particular pathogen contributes to serious periodontal diseases and systemic conditions, including some cancers.
  • Researchers used a specialized genetic tool, a transposon insertion library, to identify which genes are important for the pathogen's ability to colonize cells and survive in living organisms.
  • The findings confirmed the significance of known virulence factors and discovered new genes that play a crucial role in the pathogen's fitness, emphasizing the complexity of its mechanisms in disease progression.

Article Abstract

is an important cause of serious periodontal diseases, and is emerging as a pathogen in several systemic conditions including some forms of cancer. Initial colonization by involves interaction with gingival epithelial cells, and the organism can also access host tissues and spread haematogenously. To better understand the mechanisms underlying these properties, we utilized a highly saturated transposon insertion library of , and assessed the fitness of mutants during epithelial cell colonization and survival in a murine abscess model by high-throughput sequencing (Tn-Seq). Transposon insertions in many genes previously suspected as contributing to virulence showed significant fitness defects in both screening assays. In addition, a number of genes not previously associated with virulence were identified as important for fitness. We further examined fitness defects of four such genes by generating defined mutations. Genes encoding a carbamoyl phosphate synthetase, a replication-associated recombination protein, a nitrosative stress responsive HcpR transcription regulator, and RNase Z, a zinc phosphodiesterase, showed a fitness phenotype in epithelial cell colonization and in a competitive abscess infection. This study verifies the importance of several well-characterized putative virulence factors of and identifies novel fitness determinants of the organism.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5581868PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fcimb.2017.00378DOI Listing

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