In this study we compared nine Shiga toxin (Stx)-producing Escherichia coli O157:H7 patient isolates for Stx levels, stx-phage insertion site(s), and pathogenicity in a streptomycin (Str)-treated mouse model. The strains encoded stx 2a , stx 1a and stx 2a , or stx 2a and stx 2c. All of the strains elaborated 10 5-10 6 cytotoxic doses 50% (CD 50) into the supernatant after growth in vitro as measured on Vero cells, and showed variable levels of increased toxin production after growth with sub-inhibitory levels of ciprofloxacin (Cip). The stx 2a +stx 2c + isolates were 90-100% lethal for Str-treated BALB/c mice, though one isolate, JH2013, had a delayed time-to-death. The stx 2a + isolate was avirulent. Both an stx 2a and a recA deletion mutant of one of the stx 2a +stx 2c + strains, JH2010, exhibited at least a three-log decrease in cytotoxicity in vitro and both were avirulent in the mice. Stool from Str-treated mice infected with the highly virulent isolates were 10-to 100-fold more cytotoxic than feces from mice infected with the clinical isolate, JH2012, that made only Stx2a. Taken together these findings demonstrate that the stx 2a-phage from JH2010 induces to higher levels in vivo than does the phage from JH2012. The stx 1a +stx 2a + clinical isolates were avirulent and neutralization of Stx1 in stool from mice infected with those strains indicated that the toxin produced in vivo was primarily Stx1a. Treatment of mice infected with Stx1a+Stx2a+ isolates with Cip resulted in an increase in Stx2a production in vivo and lethality in the mice. Our data suggest that high levels of Stx2a in stool are predictive of virulence in mice.
The release of Stx from STEC has been thought to be tied to phage-mediated lysis of the host bacterial cell. In this study, we found that the stx 2a phage lytic genes are not required for the virulence of pathogenic O157:H7 clinical isolates in a murine model of STEC infection or for release of Stx2a into the supernatant of bacterial cultures. These results point to an alternate mechanism for Stx2a release from STEC strains.
Shiga toxin (Stx)-producing Escherichia coli (STEC) is a major cause of foodborne illness globally, and infection with serotype O157:H7 is associated with increased risk of hospitalization and death in the U.S. The Stxs are encoded on a temperate bacteriophage (stx-phage), and phage induction leads to Stx expression; subtype Stx2a in particular is associated with more severe disease. Our earlier studies showed significant levels of RecA-independent Stx2 production by STEC O157:H7 strain JH2010 (stx2astx2c), even though activated RecA is the canonical trigger for stx-phage induction. This study aimed to further compare and contrast RecA-independent toxin production in Stx2-producing clinical isolates. Deletion of recA in JH2010 resulted in higher in vitro supernatant cytotoxicity compared to that from JH2016ΔrecA, and the addition of the chelator ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA) and various metal cations to the growth medium exacerbated the difference in cytotoxicity exhibited by the two deletion strains. Both the wild-type and ΔrecA deletion strains exhibited differential cytotoxicity in the feces of infected, streptomycin (Str)-treated mice. Comparison of the stx2a-phage predicted protein sequences from JH2010 and JH2016 revealed low amino acid identity of key phage regulatory proteins that are involved in RecA-mediated stx-phage induction. Additionally, other STEC isolates containing JH2010-like and JH2016-like stx2a-phage sequences led to similar Stx2 localization, as demonstrated by JH2010ΔrecA and JH2016ΔrecA, respectively. Deletion of the stx2a-phage regulatory region in the wild-type strains prevented the differential localization of Stx2 into the culture supernatant, a finding that suggests that the stx2a-phage regulatory region is involved in the differential ΔrecA phenotypes exhibited by the two strains. We hypothesize that the amino acid differences between the JH2010 and JH2016 phage repressor proteins (CIs) lead to structural differences that are responsible for differential interaction with RecA. Overall, we discovered that non-homologous stx2a-phage regulatory proteins differentially influence RecA-independent, and possibly RecA-dependent, Stx2 production. These findings emphasize the importance of studying non-homologous regulatory elements among stx2-phages and their influence on Stx2 production and virulence of STEC isolates.
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