AI Article Synopsis

  • Listeriosis is caused by the bacterium Listeria monocytogenes (Lm), and many food isolates of Lm carry a mutation that lowers their virulence.
  • Research suggests that exposure to these less virulent strains may help build immunity against more dangerous strains of Lm and that current food safety practices might actually have negative effects on public health.
  • In a study using mice and human models, it was found that while exposure to less virulent strains can trigger protective immune responses, overly aggressive removal of these strains from the food supply could increase the incidence of severe listeriosis cases.

Article Abstract

Listeriosis is a clinically severe foodborne disease caused by (Lm). However, approximately 45% of Lm isolates in food carry a virulence-attenuating single-nucleotide polymorphism in , which normally facilitates crossing the intestinal barrier during the initial stages of infection. We hypothesized that (i) natural exposure to virulence-attenuated (vA) Lm strains through food can confer protective immunity against listeriosis attributable to fully virulent (fV) strains and (ii) current food safety measures to minimize exposure to both Lm strains may have adverse population-level outcomes. To test these hypotheses, we evaluated the host response to Lm in a mouse infection model and through mathematical modelling in a human population. After oral immunization with a murinized vA Lm strain, we demonstrated the elicitation of a CD8+ T-cell response and protection against subsequent challenge with an fV strain. A two-strain compartmental mathematical model of human exposure to Lm with cross-protective immunity was also developed. If food safety testing strategies preferentially identify and remove food contaminated by vA strains (potentially due to their common occurrence in foods and higher concentration in food compared to fV strains), the model predicted minimal public health benefit to potentially adverse effects. For example, reducing vA exposures by half, while maintaining fV exposures results in an approximately 6% rise in annual incidence.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6936009PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rsfs.2019.0046DOI Listing

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