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Transcriptome Analysis of Arcobacter butzleri Infection in a Mucus-Producing Human Intestinal Model. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Arcobacter butzleri is a foodborne pathogen that can cause gastrointestinal symptoms like diarrhea and is found in various environments and organisms.
  • The study analyzed three strains of A. butzleri from human stools using a human intestinal model to assess their ability to colonize and invade the system.
  • Results showed that all strains could colonize the model, with one strain exhibiting the highest colonization ability and significant upregulation of both known and novel virulence-related genes linked to metabolism and iron transport.

Article Abstract

Arcobacter butzleri is a foodborne pathogen belonging to the family. This Gram-negative bacterium is found in water, food, and various organisms, including farm animals, clams, and fish. Moreover, A. butzleri has been isolated from human stool samples, where it was associated with gastrointestinal symptoms such as diarrhea. The present study focused on the transcriptome analysis of three A. butzleri strains isolated from human stools and displaying variable virulence potential . We used a mucus-producing human intestinal model (Caco-2/HT29-MTX-E12) to study the colonization and invasion abilities of the three A. butzleri strains. The ability of all three A. butzleri strains to colonize our model system was subsequently confirmed. Moreover, transcriptomics showed the upregulation of putative virulence genes. Among these genes, , , and , which belong to the same operon, were upregulated in strain LMG 11119, which also had the greatest colonization ability. Moreover, genes not currently considered A. butzleri virulence genes were differentially expressed during cell model colonization. The main functions of these genes were linked to organic acid metabolism and iron transport and particularly to the function of the TonB complex. Recent advancements in the genomic characterization of A. butzleri revealed putative virulence genes and highlighted the possible pathogenic mechanisms used by this foodborne pathogen. It is therefore possible to study the transcriptomes of these bacteria to explore possible virulence mechanisms under conditions that mimic the infection process. The transcriptome and colonization/invasion analyses that we performed in this study enabled the evaluation of A. butzleri-mediated infection of the mucus-producing human intestinal model. We confirmed the upregulation of previously proposed virulence genes in the A. butzleri strains. In addition, we identified the differential expression of a number of other genes, which are not currently thought to be associated with virulence, in three A. butzleri strains during infection of mucus-producing human epithelial cells. Changes in the concentration of acetic acid and the upregulation of genes associated with organic acid metabolism during host-pathogen contact were also observed. These findings highlight the importance of previously unreported genes in the virulence mechanisms of A. butzleri.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9927503PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/spectrum.02071-22DOI Listing

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