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Infect Immun, July 1998, p. 3155-3163, Vol. 66, No. 7
Department of Public Health, Faculty of
Medicine, UNAM, 04510 Mexico DF, Mexico,1
and
Center for Vaccine Development, Department of
Pediatrics, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore,
Maryland 212012
Received 9 February 1998/Returned for modification 25 March
1998/Accepted 20 April 1998
Enteroaggregative Escherichia coli (EAEC) is an
emerging cause of diarrheal illness. Clinical data suggest that
diarrhea caused by EAEC is predominantly secretory in nature, but the
responsible enterotoxin has not been described. Work from our
laboratories has implicated a ca. 108-kDa protein as a heat-labile
enterotoxin and cytotoxin, as evidenced by rises in short-circuit
current and falls in tissue resistance in rat jejunal tissue mounted in an Ussing chamber. Here we report the genetic cloning, sequencing, and
characterization of this high-molecular-weight heat-labile toxin. The
toxin (designated the plasmid-encoded toxin [Pet]) is encoded on the
65-MDa adherence-related plasmid of EAEC strain 042. Nucleotide
sequence analysis suggests that the toxin is a member of the
autotransporter class of proteins, characterized by the presence of a
conserved C-terminal domain which forms a Enteroaggregative Escherichia
coli (EAEC) is an emerging cause of pediatric diarrhea and has
been associated with persistent enteric symptoms (8, 9, 14, 16,
29, 39, 44, 63). The pathogenesis of EAEC diarrhea is not
completely defined; however, two prominent histopathologic features
have been described: (i) formation of a thick mucus gel on the
intestinal mucosa (60) and (ii) mucosal damage, apparently
via the elaboration of mucosa-damaging toxin(s) (22, 28,
61). Clinical observations, including EAEC outbreaks (14,
30, 55), studies of endemic EAEC diarrhea, and adult volunteer
studies, suggest that EAEC diarrhea is predominantly secretory in
nature. Patient stools have been noted to contain mucus and often blood
but generally not polymorphonuclear cells (16, 40). Such
observations have led investigators to search for an EAEC
enterotoxin(s).
Candidate EAEC enterotoxins have been reported. Savarino et al.
(51, 52) described a heat-stable enterotoxin (EAST1), which
is related to enterotoxigenic E. coli ST; EAST1 is present in ca. 40% of EAEC strains and is also found in strains of other diarrheagenic categories and in nonpathogenic E. coli
(53). The role of EAST1 in diarrhea is questionable given
the lack of diarrhea in volunteers challenged with EAST1-producing EAEC
strains that colonized the intestine at high levels (40).
Baldwin et al. (4) described a 120-kDa heat-labile EAEC
protein which elicited rises in intracellular calcium in HEp-2 cells.
No in vivo effect of this protein has been shown.
We have observed two severe outbreaks of EAEC diarrhea in Mexican
hospitals (22) and have found that infants who died in these
outbreaks manifested necrotic lesions of the ileal mucosa. We have also
found that supernatants from the outbreak strains express two
high-molecular-mass proteins (predicted molecular masses of 108 and 116 kDa) which, when injected into rat ileal loops, induce fluid
accumulation and cytotoxic effects on the mucosa (22). These
proteins were the predominant species in the supernatants of the
outbreak strain and were recognized by the sera of the infected
patients. It has been shown recently that the 108-kDa protein elicits
rises in short-circuit current (Isc) in rat mucosal Ussing chambers
(42), an effect which is accompanied by a fall in tissue
resistance and damage to the tissue when examined under light
microscopy (43).
In this work, we report the molecular cloning and nucleotide sequence
analysis of the 108-kDa EAEC enterotoxin derived from a proven
pathogenic strain. The toxin gene is located on the 65-MDa EAEC
virulence plasmid (the AA plasmid) and is clustered within a locus of
putative virulence-associated genes. The toxin is a member of a family
of autotransporter proteins which feature serine protease motifs and
are related to the immunoglobulin A proteases of Neisseria
and Haemophilus species (33). Several proteins in
this class have been described recently; however, this is the first
instance of an autotransporter protein with enterotoxic activity and
represents what may be a critical virulence factor of EAEC.
Bacterial strains and plasmids.
Bacterial strains and
plasmids used in this study are listed in Table
1. Strain 042 was isolated from a child
with diarrhea in the course of an epidemiological study in Lima, Peru,
in 1983; this strain has been shown to cause diarrhea in adult
volunteers in Baltimore (40). Strain 049766 was implicated
in an outbreak of EAEC infection in Mexico City; JM221 was obtained
from J. Mathewson. E. coli HB101 and DH5
0019-9567/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Pet, an Autotransporter Enterotoxin from
Enteroaggregative Escherichia coli
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ABSTRACT
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials & Methods
Results
Discussion
References
-barrel pore in the
bacterial outer membrane and through which the mature protein is
transported. The Pet toxin is highly homologous to the EspP protease of
enterohemorrhagic E. coli and to EspC of enteropathogenic
E. coli, an as yet cryptic protein. In addition to its
potential role in EAEC infection, Pet represents the first enterotoxin
within the autotransporter class of secreted proteins. We hypothesize
that other closely related members of this class may also produce
enterotoxic effects.
![]()
INTRODUCTION
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials & Methods
Results
Discussion
References
![]()
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Top
Abstract
Introduction
Materials & Methods
Results
Discussion
References
were used as
recipient strains for genetic manipulations. Strains were passed
routinely on Luria-Bertani broth (L broth) or agar with the following
antibiotics where appropriate: ampicillin (100 mg/ml), kanamycin (50 mg/ml), streptomycin (100 mg/ml), tetracycline (15 mg/ml), and
chloramphenicol (20 mg/ml). All strains were stored at
70°C in
Trypticase soy broth with 15% glycerol.
TABLE 1.
E. coli strains and plasmids used in
this work
Molecular cloning and nucleotide sequence analysis. All genetic manipulations were performed by standard methods (2). Plasmid DNA was extracted by using a Plasmid Midi kit (Qiagen Inc., Chatsworth, Calif.). Purification of DNA fragments and extraction from agarose gel slices were performed with Geneclean (Bio 101, La Jolla, Calif.). Plasmid DNA was introduced into E. coli HB101 by transformation of competent cells (Gibco/BRL, Gaithersburg, Md.) according to the method of Hanahan (26). Colony blot hybridization was performed by standard methods (2), using as a probe the insert from clone pJPN205 (Fig. 1).
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Cosmid library construction.
Plasmid DNA was purified from
strain 042 and digested partially with the restriction endonuclease
Sau3a. The resulting fragments (15 to 30 kb in size) were
ligated into the BamHI site of the cosmid vector pCVD301,
and the ligation mix was packaged into phage by using the Gigapack
packaging extract (Stratagene, Inc.). Recombinant phage were
transfected into E. coli HB101. The library comprising 768 clones was maintained at
70°C in L broth containing 15% glycerol.
Protein methods. Late-logarithmic-phase nutrient broth culture supernatant of strain 042 was subjected to 60 and 75% ammonium sulfate fractionation for 18 h at 4°C. Precipitates collected by centrifugation were dissolved and dialyzed in 0.07 M sodium phosphate buffer, pH 8.2. This suspension was treated with a 3.5 M solution of potassium phosphate, pH 6.8; the precipitate obtained was fractionated by chromatography in DEAE-cellulose and Sephadex columns (LKB Biotechnology, Uppsala, Sweden) and concentrated 10-fold by ultrafiltration through a Diaflo YM100 membrane (Amicon, Lexington, Mass.). The protein separated in polyvinylidene fluoride by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) as described by Laemmli (36) was transferred to Immobilon membranes (Millipore, Bedford, Mass.) prior to amino-terminal sequencing. Amino-terminal sequencing was performed by automated Edman degradation at the Protein and Nucleic Acid Facility, Stanford University, Palo Alto, Calif.
Outer membrane preparations were performed by concentrating overnight cultures of HB101(pCEFN1) and solubilizing the membranes in Triton X-100 as previously described (12). Cytoplasmic and periplasmic fractions were prepared as previously described (12). Preparations were separated by SDS-PAGE and were visualized by Coomassie blue staining.Immunologic methods.
The purified Pet protein was injected
subcutaneously in complete Freund's adjuvant to New Zealand White
rabbits weighing between 2.5 and 3.0 kg. Rabbits received subcutaneous
boosters of 200 mg of total protein on days 0, 15, and 20. Rabbits were
exsanguinated on day 25, and the serum collected was stored at
20°C
until use.
Ussing chamber experiments. Six pieces of rat jejunum removed from adult male Sprague-Dawley rats under sodium pentobarbital anesthesia were placed in ice-cold Ringer's solution for mammals and gassed with an O2-CO2 (95%:5%) mixture. The excised segments were cut open along the mesenteric border, washed with cold Ringer's solution, and mounted between the circular openings of six Ussing hemichambers. Each hemichamber was filled with 10 ml of gassed Ringer's solution and kept at 37°C under constant O2-CO2 bubbling (41). Chambers were equilibrated for 30 min before experiments were initiated. After addition of the test sample, transepithelial electrical potential difference (PD) was measured at 10-min intervals under current-clamped conditions. Tissue conductance was determined at an applied current of 100 µA, and Isc was calculated by using Ohm's law (25).
Samples used in Ussing chamber experiments consisted of 100 ml of L-broth cultures grown overnight at 37°C without shaking. After centrifugation at 12,000 × g for 10 min, supernatants were concentrated and size fractionated (>50 kDa) by passage through Biomax-50 Ultrafree filters (Millipore). Samples were adjusted to a concentration of 25 µg of protein/ml, and 100 µl of each sample was added to the mucosal hemichamber of rat jejunum preparations.Nucleotide sequence accession number. The sequence of the pet gene has been submitted to GenBank under accession no. AF056581.
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RESULTS |
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Cloning and sequencing of the 108-kDa toxin gene. We had previously raised polyclonal antiserum to the 108-kDa EAEC protein derived from strain 049766 (implicated in an EAEC outbreak in Mexico). We used this antiserum to localize the toxin gene in strain 042. Use of the anti-108-kDa protein antiserum in Western immunoblotting of concentrated culture supernatants from E. coli HB101 containing the 65-MDa plasmid pAA2 (from strain 042) revealed the presence of the 108-kDa protein, whereas culture supernatants from HB101 lacking pAA2 were negative for the toxin. To clone the plasmid-encoded toxin gene, a cosmid library of plasmid pAA2 was constructed in vector pCVD301. A portion of the cosmid bank was subjected to restriction analysis in order to identify a small subset of clones which were representative of the entire parent plasmid. This series of experiments resulted in the selection of 11 overlapping cosmid clones which encompassed the large majority of the plasmid. Subsequent Western immunoblot analysis of this cosmid subset revealed that two of the 11 cosmid clones expressed high-molecular-weight bands that reacted with anti-108-kDa protein antiserum (not shown). Restriction mapping of these two cosmid clones demonstrated an overlapping region of approximately 20 kb.
The two toxin-encoding cosmids shared a common 13-kb MluI fragment. A series of subclones was constructed from this region (Table 1 and Fig. 1). Western immunoblot analysis suggested that pJPN201, carrying the full 13-kb MluI fragment, expressed the 108-kDa protein, whereas the nested clone pJPN204 did not.Sequence analysis of the toxin gene. Single-stranded nucleotide sequencing was performed on the insert of pJPN201. Due to the absence of the 108-kDa protein in supernatants of HB101(pJPN204), we expected to find an ORF near the left terminus of the cloned insert. Indeed, analysis of the nucleotide sequence of pJPN201 revealed a large ORF (3,885 bp in length) starting 617 bp from the MluI site at the left end of the pJPN201 insert (Fig. 1). The G+C content of this ORF was 43.6%, significantly lower than average for the E. coli genome. Sequence analysis of the cloned insert did not reveal any other ORFs which could potentially encode a protein greater than 80 kDa in size. In recognition of the fact that the large ORF apparently encodes the high-molecular-weight toxin described by Eslava et al. (22) and by Navarro-Garcia et al. (43), this gene has been designated pet (EAEC plasmid-encoded toxin). Figure 1 illustrates the map of pJPN201 including the position of pet and the subclones that were used for sequencing and phenotypic analysis.
We identified a potential pet promoter which had a
10
region (TTTAAT) and a
35 region (GTAACA) positioned 48 and 70 bp, respectively, upstream from the ATG start codon. A possible
rho-independent stem-loop transcriptional termination signal
was also identified 6 bp downstream of the TGA termination codon of the
pet gene. The presence of the promoter is consistent
with the ability of clone HB101(pJPN201) to express the Pet
product.
Downstream from the pet gene are five insertion sequence
(IS)-homologous ORFs (Fig. 1). Immediately downstream from
pet is a potential ORF of 581 bp (in the antisense
direction), the predicted product of which exhibits 49% identity with
a transposase of Burkholderia cepacia (accession no.
U44828). Within this ORF, in the same orientation as the transposase
and 647 bp downstream of the 3' end of the pet gene, lies a
gene homologous to the astA gene, which encodes the
38-amino-acid EAST1 heat-stable enterotoxin (51).
Interestingly, the astA gene of strain 042 is 100%
identical at the amino acid level with the predicted sequence of the
astA gene from enterotoxigenic E. coli strain
H10407 (64; accession no. S81691); this EAST1
differs in only one residue from the EAST1 protein of EAEC strain 17-2. Immediately upstream of the B. cepacia IS-like element, and
in the opposite orientation, is a sequence of 1,310 bp which is 97%
identical to an IS629 element of Shigella sonnei
(37). IS629 is 95% identical to the
IS1203 element found recently in pathogenic E. coli O111:H
(45). Further downstream from
pet lies an element identical to Shigella
dysenteriae IS911 (47), the sequence of
which is interrupted by a complete IS30 element
(13). Upstream of this element lies a complete
IS1 element (50).
To facilitate further analyses, a minimal clone of the pet
gene (pCEFN1) was constructed by PCR and cloned into pSPORT1 (Fig. 1).
The insert was flanked by the native MluI site (upstream) and an engineered KpnI site (downstream) and spanned from
610 bp upstream of pet to 50 bp downstream of the
termination codon. This fragment included the predicted pet
promoter but not the astA gene. Of note, all known promoters
of pSPORT1 are aligned in opposite orientation to the cloned
pet gene in pCEFN1.
Assuming that the first ATG codon of the ORF corresponds to the
translational start codon, the pet gene would encode a
1,295-aminio-acid protein with a predicted molecular mass of 140.0 kDa
and a calculated isoelectric point of 6.71. Comparison of the deduced
amino acid sequence with those listed in GenBank databases revealed
58% overall identity (83% similarity) with the recently described
EspP protein of enterohemorrhagic E. coli (11)
(Fig. 2). In addition, pet displayed 55% identity (70% similarity) and 44%
identity (60% similarity) with the espC gene product of
enteropathogenic E. coli and with SepA, the major secreted
protein of Shigella flexneri, respectively. Significant
homology was also seen with other members of the so-called
autotransporter family of bacterial virulence factors. Notably, the
homologies displayed are not uniformly distributed over the sequences;
the N-terminal passenger domain (encoding the mature protein) of
pet displays 49, 45, and 31% identity to the EspP, EspC,
and SepA passenger domains, respectively, whereas the C-terminal
domains (the C-terminal
barrel) exhibited 90, 80, and 78%
identity, respectively.
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Processing and export of Pet.
Since the ca. 108-kDa protein
present in culture supernatant fluids is smaller than predicted from
the N-terminal processed ORF (1,243 amino acids; molecular mass of
134.4 kDa), the Pet protein apparently undergoes a posttranslational
processing step, namely, cleavage of the passenger domain from the
domain. Members of the autotransporter family of proteins are exported
through the outer membrane of the bacterium via the presence of a
characteristic C-terminal amphipathic region (
domain) comprising an
even number of antiparallel
sheets; this region of the protein
forms a
-barrel structure in the outer membrane through which the
passenger domain of the protein passes. The high homology between the
domains of Pet and the EspP, EspC, and SepA proteins suggests that
the
domain of Pet functions as an outer membrane translocator and that cleavage of the passenger domain occurs during this step. Based on
the sequence homology with other autotransporters the cleavage site was
predicted to be between N1018 and N1019.
domain was visualized by SDS-PAGE analysis of
envelopes from HB101(pCEFN1) extracted with Triton X-100 and compared
with similar extracts of HB101(pSPORT1). These analyses revealed
the presence of a 30-kDa species in the fractions obtained from
HB101(pCEFN1) that was absent from the similar fractions of the control
strain (Fig. 3a). As expected, the N-terminal amino acid sequence of
this protein (NLNKRMGDLR...) placed the site of cleavage between
N1018 and N1019. Cleavage at this point, and at
the site of cleavage of the signal sequence
(A52-A53), would result in a secreted Pet
product of 104.2 kDa, a mass which agrees well with the mass of 108 kDa
predicted for Pet on SDS-PAGE analysis.
Structural predictions of the
domain of Pet, from the
N1019 cleavage site to the terminal phenylalanine residue,
were performed by using the algorithm {Hb(i) = [h(i ± 4) + h(i ± 2) + h(i)]/5} described by Jähnig (32). According to these
predictions, the
domain of Pet consists of at least 14 membrane-spanning amphipathic
strands interrupted by large external
loops and generally short periplasmic loops, spanning amino acid
positions 1032 to 1295 of the Pet precursor. These results were
confirmed by calculating the regions of high surface probability as
described by Emini et al. (21), using the GCG program from
the Wisconsin sequence analysis package, since such regions are always
located between the
strands. An alpha helix was not predicted
upstream of the amphipathic strands.
To test the hypothesis that the
domain is involved in translocation
of the Pet passenger domain to the external milieu, the deletion mutant
pJPN205 (truncated at residue 770) was analyzed for expression of the
mature Pet protein. By Western immunoblotting, HB101(pJPN205)
supernatants did not reveal a protein consistent with this truncated
passenger domain (Fig. 3b, lane F),
although an appropriate-size protein species was detected in the
bacterial periplasm (Fig. 3b, lane B) and, to a much lesser extent, in
the cytoplasm (Fig. 3b, lane D). These data confirm that the C-terminal
domain is required for Pet translocation to the external milieu.
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Phenotypic analysis of the Pet protein. We have shown that concentrated supernatant from strain 049766 produces an increase in jejunal PD and Isc (43). The >50-kDa fraction of supernatants from HB101(pJPN201) also induced rises in jejunal PD and Isc which were not induced by concentrated supernatants from HB101(pJRD215) or HB101(pJPN204). Supernatants derived from the minimal clone of pet were also found to induce rises in Isc (Fig. 4), which were significantly higher than those induced by the cloning vector, suggesting that Pet is the enterotoxic moiety. Rises in Isc and PD induced by the pet clone were similar in timing and degree to those induced by the parent strain 042.
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Regulation of Pet expression. The EspP protein has been shown to be regulated by temperature (11). To obtain information on the regulation of pet expression, we analyzed the expression of Pet from EAEC strain 042 grown at different temperatures (20, 37, and 42°C). The bacteria were grown to an optical density at 600 nm of 1.0, and concentrated culture supernatants were analyzed by SDS-PAGE for the presence of Pet. The mature Pet protein was observed in similar amounts from supernatants of 042 grown at all three temperatures (not shown), suggesting that the pet gene is not strictly temperature regulated.
Prevalence of the pet gene among EAEC. To determine the prevalence of the pet gene among clinical isolates, colony blot hybridization studies were performed with a restriction fragment internal to the pet gene, corresponding to the region encoding residues 62 to 781 of the Pet protein. Against a collection of EAEC strains from various epidemiological studies around the world, 5 of 34 strains (15%) yielded a positive hybridization signal with the probe (Table 2).
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DISCUSSION |
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The pathogenesis of EAEC diarrhea is poorly understood. Clinical descriptions suggest that EAEC diarrhea is secretory in nature and therefore perhaps due to the presence of an as yet unidentified enterotoxin. The low-molecular-weight putative enterotoxin EAST1 has been found in some EAEC strains, but its role in diarrhea has yet to be proven. Eslava et al. (22) have described a ca. 108-kDa EAEC protein that is able to elicit fluid accumulation and mucosal destruction in rat ileal loops. Navarro-Garcia et al. (43) suggested that this protein elicits rises in Isc and decreases of electrical resistance in rat jejunal tissue mounted in an Ussing chamber, accompanied by damage to the epithelial cells (43). Using molecular methods, we have characterized this high-molecular-weight protein and have demonstrated that it is a plasmid-encoded autotransporter enterotoxin of EAEC.
Our analysis of the gene encoding the Pet enterotoxin shows homology
with members of the autotransporter family of bacterial proteins. This
family comprises a rapidly growing number of virulence determinants of
gram-negative bacteria (33). The class takes its name from
its so-called type IV secretion mechanism (24), in which an
N-terminal amino acid leader sequence directs secretion through the
general secretory pathway into the bacterial cytoplasm; once in the
periplasm, a C-terminal amphipathic region forms a
barrel in the
outer membrane, allowing the processed N-terminal protein to pass
through into the extracellular milieu. In some cases, the protein
remains anchored in the outer membrane (7), whereas in other
cases, the protein is released into the supernatant. Secondary
structure analyses of the predicted Pet product by the method of
Jähnig (32) suggested the presence of 14 amphipathic
strands, each strand consisting of 10 to 14 amino acids. An even
number of antiparallel transmembrane segments would place the first and
last strands in opposite orientation and would allow closing of the
barrel, a feature observed for the trimeric porins such as OmpF
(15). Thus, our analyses suggest that the
domain forms a
pore through which the passenger domain is translocated to the surface,
as is typical of the type IV mechanism.
The release of the Pet passenger domain apparently occurred by
proteolytic cleavage between residues N1018 and
N1019. In the case of the immunoglobulin A1 proteases of
Neisseria gonorrhoeae, this processing step is a result of
autoproteolysis involving the serine protease site of the molecule
(46). The presence in Pet of a putative serine protease
active site suggests that a similar step could also occur in the case
of Pet. To characterize further the processing step involved in the
maturation of Pet, export of the passenger domain was investigated in
E. coli strains lacking either the periplasmic protease
DegP, the OmpT and OmpP proteases of the outer membrane, or DsbA, the
disulfide bond isomerase. The results indicated that formation of the
passenger and
domains was independent of these four enzymes and
implied that either another unidentified protease is involved or
autoprocessing may occur.
A number of autotransporter proteins from Enterobacteriaceae have been reported recently. Among these are EspP from enterohemorrhagic E. coli (11), EspC from enteropathogenic E. coli (57), She (49), and SepA (6) from S. flexneri and Tsh (48). Each of these proteins is >100 kDa, is processed and exported by the type IV mechanism, and features a serine protease active site motif. The precise roles of these proteins have not been determined, however; only Pet has been tested rigorously for enterotoxic activity.
Analysis of nucleotide sequence data identified a number of IS-like
elements flanking the genes encoding members of the autotransporters of
Enterobacteriaceae. Of note is the presence of an
IS629 (IS1203) element downstream of the
pet gene. Other workers have shown that IS629
elements are linked to the presence of putative virulence loci, but of
specific interest is the association of this IS-like element with the
espP, sepA, and she genes.
Furthermore, espP of E. coli O157:H7 is flanked
by both an IS629 element and an IS1 element
(although in the opposite orientation to the pet gene), while the identical gene from O26:H
is flanked by
IS629 and remnants of an IS911 element
(20). These data coupled to the fact that pet has
a G+C content significantly lower than the average for E. coli (51%) suggests that the gene may have been acquired by
strain 042 via horizontal transfer. Certainly, the association of most
autotransporters in E. coli and Shigella with the
IS629-like elements suggests a role for this element in the
evolution and spread of these homologs among the
Enterobacteriaceae.
The enterotoxic activity induced by Pet is consistent with the secretory diarrhea seen in most patients with EAEC enteritis. However, the rises in Isc induced by the Pet protein are accompanied by a fall in tissue resistance, and light microscopic examination of the tissue after exposure to the toxin in an Ussing chamber reveals damage to the tissue (43). In light of observations suggesting that EAEC causes cytotoxic effects in in vitro intestinal culture and T84 cells, it is tempting to speculate that the Pet toxin may have cytopathic effects as well (28, 38). This possibility is currently under investigation. As well, we have observed that while only a small fraction of EAEC strains express the pet gene, it is quite possible that only these strains are in fact diarrheagenic. Indeed, human volunteer studies suggest that strain 042 induced diarrhea in healthy adults whereas three other strains did not induce enteric symptoms (40). Our DNA probe analysis for the pet gene suggests that of the four strains fed, only strain 042 expresses Pet. Moreover, Pet was initially isolated from EAEC strain 049766, which was implicated in a highly virulent outbreak of diarrhea in Mexico. The hypothesis that only Pet-producing EAEC strains are capable of inducing diarrhea is currently being tested in epidemiological studies.
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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This work was supported by Public Health Service grants AI33096 and TW00499 (to J.P.N.) and by DGAPA IN-208493 (to C.E.).
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FOOTNOTES |
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* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of Public Health, Faculty of Medicine, UNAM, Ap. Postal 70-443, 04510 Mexico DF, Mexico. Phone: (525) 616-1162. Fax: (525) 616-1616. E-mail: eslava{at}servidor.unam.mx.
Editor: J. T. Barbieri
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