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Infection and Immunity, November 2004, p. 6589-6596, Vol. 72, No. 11
0019-9567/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/IAI.72.11.6589-6596.2004
Quorum Sensing: a Transcriptional Regulatory System Involved in the Pathogenicity of Burkholderia mallei
Ricky L. Ulrich,1*
David DeShazer,1
Harry B. Hines,2 and
Jeffrey A. Jeddeloh1*
Bacteriology Division,1
Toxinology/Aerobiology Division, United States Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases, Fort Detrick, Maryland2
Received 4 March 2004/
Returned for modification 19 April 2004/
Accepted 27 July 2004

ABSTRACT
Numerous gram-negative bacterial pathogens regulate virulence
factor expression by using a cell density mechanism termed quorum
sensing (QS). An in silico analysis of the
Burkholderia mallei ATCC 23344 genome revealed that it encodes at least two
luxI and four
luxR homologues. Using mass spectrometry, we showed
that wild-type
B. mallei produces the signaling molecules
N-octanoyl-homoserine
lactone and
N-decanoyl-homoserine lactone. To determine if QS
is involved in the virulence of
B. mallei, we generated mutations
in each putative
luxIR homologue and tested the pathogenicities
of the derivative strains in aerosol BALB/c mouse and intraperitoneal
hamster models. Disruption of the
B. mallei QS alleles, especially
in RJ16 (
bmaII) and RJ17 (
bmaI3), which are
luxI mutants, significantly
reduced virulence, as indicated by the survival of mice who
were aerosolized with 10
4 CFU (10 50% lethal doses [LD
50s]).
For the
B. mallei transcriptional regulator mutants (
luxR homologues),
mutation of the
bmaR5 allele resulted in the most pronounced
decrease in virulence, with 100% of the challenged animals surviving
a dose of 10 LD
50s. Using a Syrian hamster intraperitoneal model
of infection, we determined the LD
50s for wild-type
B. mallei and each QS mutant. An increase in the relative LD
50 was found
for RJ16 (
bmaI1) (>967 CFU), RJ17 (
bmaI3) (115 CFU), and
RJ20 (
bmaR5) (151 CFU) compared to wild-type
B. mallei (<13
CFU). These findings demonstrate that
B. mallei carries multiple
luxIR homologues that either directly or indirectly regulate
the biosynthesis of an essential virulence factor(s) that contributes
to the pathogenicity of
B. mallei in vivo.

INTRODUCTION
Burkholderia mallei, the etiologic agent of glanders, is a gram-negative,
oxidase-positive, nonmotile bacillus that is an obligate animal
pathogen (
4). The natural hosts for
B. mallei are horses, donkeys,
and mules (solipeds). Until the early 20th century and the development
of motorized transportation, glanders was common throughout
the world (
4). After the implementation of quarantine strategies
for imported animals, no naturally occurring human cases of
glanders have been reported in the United States since the 1930s.
Human glanders is uncommon now, occasionally occurring in individuals
such as veterinarians, slaughterhouse workers, and laboratory
scientists whose occupation exposes them to infection. In solipeds,
two distinctive forms of glanders may arise, either an acute
(observed with mules and donkeys) or a chronic (common in horses)
form. Symptoms of acute glanders include weight loss, difficulty
breathing, and an elevated temperature. In contrast, horses
with chronic glanders may exhibit pulmonary and cutaneous (farcy)
symptoms. Human acute glanders is characterized by fever and
fatigue as well as inflammation of and nodule formation on the
face and peripheral limbs (
4). Chronic glanders in humans presents
with swollen lymph nodes, ulcerating nodules in the alimentary
and respiratory tracts, weight loss, and numerous subcutaneous
abscesses (
4).
B. mallei can cause disease in a variety of animals,
including mice, hamsters, ferrets, guinea pigs, and monkeys,
in addition to solipeds and humans (
9,
22).
Many gram-negative bacteria possess sophisticated communication systems that allow microorganisms to detect and respond, in a cell-density-dependent manner, to fluctuating environmental conditions at the transcriptional level. This ability to couple extracellular and intracellular signals, termed quorum sensing (QS), involves the synthesis and accumulation of N-acyl-homoserine lactones (AHLs) (6, 10, 13). AHL biosynthesis is enzymatically mediated by the LuxI family of proteins, which are N-acyl-homoserine lactone synthases (AHSs), and a single AHS may produce multiple AHLs with various acyl chain lengths and chemical modifications (12). Cytosolic LuxR proteins respond to AHLs in a concentration-dependent manner through binding of the membrane-permeative signal molecule (AHL). This AHL-protein interaction facilitates conformational changes and multimerization, which in turn induces or represses target gene expression (11). In animal and plant pathogens, this coordinated gene expression of alleles encoding proteins needed for virulence allows microorganisms to elicit an overwhelming attack before host cells can mount an effective defense (2, 7, 12, 17, 25, 30, 37).
Functional QS networks have recently been identified in Burkholderia cepacia, Burkholderia vietnamiensis, Burkholderia thailandensis, and Burkholderia pseudomallei (1, 3, 15, 20, 32, 34-36). Collectively, these Burkholderia QS networks have been shown to both positively and negatively regulate various cellular processes, including AHL and protease production, siderophore biosynthesis, biofilm formation, lipase and beta-hemolytic activities, swarming and twitching motilities, and substrate utilization (18, 20, 21, 32, 35, 36). Furthermore, disruption of these cell signaling systems has been shown to reduce the pathogenicity of B. cepacia and Burkholderia pseudomallei in murine and hamster models of infection (1, 31, 34, 36).
Considering that no effective vaccine is available against glanders as well as the risk of B. mallei weaponization, investigations focusing on vaccine development against this highly infectious Burkholderia species are essential. The objective of this study was to analyze the functional role between QS and the pathogenicity of B. mallei. Utilizing two animal models of infection, we clearly demonstrate that QS is involved in the pathogenicity of B. mallei.

MATERIALS AND METHODS
Bacterial strains and plasmids.
The bacterial strains and cloning vectors used for this study
are described in Table
1.
B. mallei was cultured in Luria-Bertani
(LB) broth or on plates containing 4% glycerol (LBG) (Sigma,
St. Louis, Mo.).
Escherichia coli strains containing recombinant
clones were grown on LB plates or in broth containing 25 µg
of kanamycin (Sigma)/ml and 50 µg of 5-bromo-4-chloro-3-indolyl-ß-
D-galactoside
(Sigma)/ml by using standard procedures (
26). For AHL detection,
Agrobacterium tumefaciens NTL4 was cultured in AT minimal medium
at 30°C (
11).
Cloning of B. mallei QS genes, mutant construction, gene disruption, and mutant confirmation.
PCR primers for disruption cassettes were made by using the
B. mallei ATCC 23344 sequences (The Institute for Genomic Research)
that were confirmed in silico to carry putative
luxIR genes.
Genomic DNA for PCR amplification was purified by using a MasterPure
DNA purification kit according to the manufacturer's instructions
(Epicentre Technologies, Madison, Wis.). Internal gene fragments
were PCR amplified with the primer pairs listed in Table
2 under
the following conditions: 1 cycle at 94°C for 5 min; 30
cycles at 94°C for 30 s, 56°C for 30 s, and 72°C
for 30 s; and a final 7-min extension at 72°C. Site-specific
integration was confirmed by using the cycling conditions described
above, with a 5-min extension time, by use of the gene-specific
PCR primer sets listed in Table
2. PCR amplification was performed
by using an Epicentre FailSafe kit with buffer J (Epicentre
Technologies). Reactions were analyzed by standard methods,
and the products were subcloned into pCR2.1-TOPO (Invitrogen,
Carlsbad, Calif.). Ligation products were transformed into One
Shot chemically competent
E. coli TOP10 cells and then screened
accordingly (
26). Mutant construction was performed as previously
described (
33). For gene expression in
E. coli TOP10 cells,
the
B. mallei luxI genes were PCR amplified as described above,
cloned into pCR2.1-TOPO, and chemically transformed into
E. coli TOP10. Plasmid purification was performed by using a QIAprep
Spin miniprep kit (Qiagen, Valencia, Calif.), and the resulting
clones were digested with EcoRI (New England Biolabs, Beverly,
Mass.) by standard methods (
26). Digestion reactions were separated
in a 1% agarose gel, and the bands were excised by use of a
QIAquick gel extraction kit (Qiagen). Gel-purified amplicons
were ligated into EcoRI-digested pBHR1 by using a Fast-Link
DNA ligation kit (Epicentre) and were chemically transformed
into
E. coli TOP10. Recombinant clones were screened for AHL
biosynthesis (cross-streaking) by using the
A. tumefaciens NTL4
bioreporter strain.
MS analysis of culture extracts.
AHLs were extracted from culture supernatants with ethyl acetate
(Sigma), which was then evaporated, and the extracts were resuspended
in 1 ml of acetonitrile (Sigma) (
28). Aliquots (150 µl)
were dried under a steady stream of dry nitrogen, reconstituted
in 100 µl of 50% acetonitrile, and passed through a 0.45-µm-pore-size
nylon filter. Approximately 500 nl of each extract was injected
onto a CAPLC capillary liquid chromatograph (Waters Corporation,
Milford, Mass.) fitted with an Aquasil C
18 high-performance
liquid chromatography column (10 cm by 75 µm) (New Objective,
Woburn, Mass.) operating at a flow rate of 500 nl/min. A gradient
elution was employed starting at 100% buffer A (2% acetonitrile-0.1%
formic acid) and ending at 100% buffer B (80% acetonitrile-0.1%
formic acid) in 30 min. A voltage of 2.1 kV was applied to the
column effluent entering the nanoelectrospray source attached
to a Q-TOF-2 mass spectrometer (Micromass, Beverly, Mass.).
The source temperature was 125°C, and a cone voltage of
18 V was applied. Argon (10 Pa of nominal pressure) was used
as the collision gas, with an energy setting of 15 V. The results
obtained by mass spectrometry (MS) (scanning from
m/z 160 to
330 in 1.5 s) were acquired by the use of data-directed analysis
software (Waters Corporation). Ions meeting selected intensity
and charge state criteria were further characterized by MS/MS.
Precursor ions yielding a fragmentation ion at
m/z 102, representing
the lactone ring of AHL signaling molecules, were recorded,
and the (M + H)
+ values were determined. Fragmentation ions
of MS/MS spectra containing an ion at
m/z 102 were compared
to the fragmentation mass spectra of the corresponding AHL standard
when possible. If a precursor ion with an (M + H)
+ value that
was not equal to any of the AHL standards yielded an MS/MS spectrum
containing an ion at
m/z 102, the mass spectra were further
analyzed for the presence of ions that are characteristic of
acyl side chains containing substitutions that lose a water
molecule(s) after collision-induced dissociation.
Aerosol challenge, LD50 analysis, and IgG titers.
An inhalational challenge of female BALB/c mice, an analysis of the 50% lethal dose (LD50), and measurements of immunoglobulin G (IgG) titers were performed as previously described (19, 24, 33, 38). Briefly, for aerosol exposures, wild-type B. mallei and each QS mutant were inoculated (100 µl from a 3-ml overnight culture) into 10 ml of LBG broth and cultured with aeration (250 rpm) for 18 h at 37°C. Aerosolization (10 mice for each bacterial strain) was performed by nebulizing the entire 10-ml overnight culture (stationary phase), which delivered approximately 10 LD50s.

RESULTS
Structural analysis and ClustalW nucleotide alignments of B. mallei QS alleles.
Using the
B. cepacia CepIR and
Pseudomonas aeruginosa LasIR
and RhlIR proteins, we searched the
B. mallei ATCC 23344 genome
(The Institute for Genomic Research) in silico for putative
LuxIR homologues. This in silico analysis, which was confirmed
with PCR amplification (data not shown), indicated that
B. mallei carries at least four
luxR and two
luxI homologues (Fig.
1).
The structural organization of
B. mallei luxIR and the surrounding
genes is depicted in Fig.
1. The results of Blastx homology
searches for each
B. mallei QS allele are summarized in Table
3, and ClustalW nucleotide sequence alignments are described
below.
Briefly, the
bmaIR1 loci are divergently transcribed and are
separated by a GeneMark (
http://opal.biology.gatech.edu/GeneMark/gmhmm2_prok.cgi)-predicted
444-bp open reading frame (ORF) with no significant similarity
to proteins in the National Center for Biotechnology Information
databases (Fig.
1). In contrast, the
bmaIR3 alleles are genetically
linked but are not disrupted by an intergenic sequence and are
transcribed in the same direction (Fig.
1). Interestingly, a
Blastx analysis of the 5' and 3' (3 kb on each side) regions
flanking the
bpmR4 and
bpmR5 loci failed to recover any putative
luxI genes, suggesting that these QS alleles are orphaned for
a putative LuxI protein (Fig.
1).
Amino acid alignments (ClustalW) between the B. mallei BmaI1 and BmaI3 proteins, B. cepacia CepI, P. aeruginosa LasI and RhlI, B. pseudomallei BpsI, and the B. pseudomallei DD503 BpmI2 and BpmI3 (34) proteins revealed the presence of the 10 invariant amino acids (between residues 24 and 109) that are commonly found in LuxI proteins (23; also data not shown). Similarly, an alignment of the B. mallei LuxR proteins with P. aeruginosa RhlR and LasR, B. cepacia CepR, B. pseudomallei BpsR, and the B. pseudomallei DD503 BpmR2 to -5 transcriptional regulators identified six of the seven invariant amino acids that are found in LuxR proteins (8; also data not shown).
Detection and characterization of AHLs produced by wild-type B. mallei.
To determine the AHL moieties that are synthesized by wild-type B. mallei and each luxI QS mutant, we performed an MS analysis of crude culture extracts. B. mallei produced both N-octanoyl-homoserine lactone (C8-HSL) and N-decanoyl-homoserine lactone (C10-HSL), which was confirmed by an analysis of synthetic AHL standards (Table 4). In culture supernatants of RJ16, which contains a disruption in the bmaI1 AHS locus, the signaling molecules C8-HSL, C10-HSL, and N-(3-hydroxyoctanoyl)-L-homoserine lactone (3-hydroxy-C8-HSL) were identified (Table 4). In contrast to that for wild-type B. mallei and RJ16 (bmaI1 mutant), the only AHL moiety identified in RJ17 (bmaI3 mutant) culture supernatants was C8-HSL (Table 4). Disruption of the bmaI1 gene had no effect on AHL biosynthesis, and in fact, supernatants of RJ16 contained an additional AHL (3-hydroxy-C8-HSL) that was not detected in wild-type B. mallei (Table 4). Likewise, culture extracts of RJ17 (bmaI3 mutant) contained C8-HSL (Table 4). To address these discrepancies, we cloned the bmaI1 and bmaI3 genes into the broad-host-range expression vector pBHR1, transformed them into E. coli, and monitored the AHL biosynthesis profiles as described in Materials and Methods. RJ23 (expresses the bmaI1 gene) supernatants contained C8-HSL, C10-HSL, and 3-hydroxy-C8-HSL, while extracts from overnight cultures of RJ24 (heterologously expresses the bmaI3 gene) contained C8-HSL, C10-HSL, and N-(3-hydroxydecanoyl)-L-homoserine lactone (3-hydroxy-C10-HSL) (Table 4). All AHLs identified by MS in this investigation produced a fragment ion at m/z 102, which is characteristic of the lactone ring bound to the acyl side chain of AHLs. AHL standards for the hydroxy-substituted signaling molecules identified in this work (3-hydroxy-C8-HSL and 3-hydroxy-C10-HSL) were not analyzed, but the MS profiles matched spectra from a previous study (28). A summary of the relevant fragmentation ions is shown in Table 4.
Disruption of the B. mallei QS system reduces virulence in an aerosol BALB/c mouse model.
To analyze the course of acute infection for wild-type
B. mallei and each QS mutant, we monitored animal survival after bacterial
exposure for 39 days postexposure (p.e.) (Fig.
2). Groups of
10 female BALB/c mice were challenged with 10
4 CFU (10 LD
50s)
of
B. mallei and each QS mutant. Deaths for the group exposed
to wild-type
B. mallei began on day 5, and the remaining mice
succumbed by 6 days p.e. (Fig.
2). Surprisingly, 100% survival
at 39 days p.e. was observed for the experimental groups that
were aerosolized with RJ16 (
bmaI1 mutant), RJ17 (
bmaI3 mutant),
and RJ20 (
bmaR5 mutant) (Fig.
2). Deaths for mice challenged
with RJ18 (
bmaR1 mutant) and RJ19 (
bmaR3 mutant) began on days
22 and 7, respectively, and continued over the 39-day course
of analysis (Fig.
2). Although they were chronically infected
(with splenic and hepatic abscesses, animal huddling, and fur
ruffling), seven and four animals survived an aerosol challenge
with RJ18 (
bmaR1 mutant) and RJ19 (
bmaR3 mutant), respectively,
at 39 days p.e. (Fig.
2), in contrast to mice receiving wild-type
B. mallei.
LD50 determination, IgG titers, and vaccine efficacy.
To further assess the correlation between QS and the pathogenicity
of
B. mallei, we employed an acute hamster model of glanders.
The relative LD
50 for wild-type
B. mallei at 4 days p.e. was
<13 CFU, whereas individual mutagenesis of the
B. mallei QS genes increased the LD
50 up to approximately 100-fold (Table
5). Due to the sensitivity of Syrian hamsters to
B. mallei,
we performed complementation studies of the
luxI mutants with
this animal model. As expected, a reduction in the LD
50 occurred
by heterologous expression of
bmaI1 and
bmaI3 in RJ16 and RJ17,
respectively (Table
5).
In addition to determining the time to death for aerosolized
BALB/c mice and determination of LD
50s in hamsters, we determined
the IgG titers (in BALB/c mice) against
B. mallei and each QS
mutant, as previously described (
38). Seropositive reactions,
expressed as reciprocals of the highest dilutions producing
positive results, were obtained for each of the
B. mallei QS
mutants in addition to the
B. mallei positive control. The IgG
titers for each strain are reported in Table
5.
For determinations of whether the B. mallei QS mutants provided protection against a challenge with wild-type B. mallei, experimental groups that were initially aerosolized with RJ16 (bmaI1 mutant), RJ17 (bmaI3 mutant), and RJ20 (bmaR5 mutant) were rechallenged at 14 and 27 days p.e. and then aerosolized at 36 days p.e. with 10 LD50s of wild-type B. mallei. Only pre-exposure to RJ17 (bmaI3 mutant) conferred partial protection (3 of 10 animals) to a challenge with B. mallei, with mice surviving 11 days postaerosolization, compared to unimmunized animals exposed to wild-type B. mallei, who died by 6 days p.e. (Fig. 2).

DISCUSSION
This investigation analyzed the role of QS in the pathogenicity
of
B. mallei in vivo by using aerosol BALB/c mouse and Syrian
hamster models. In gram-negative bacteria, QS represents a complex
mechanism for gene regulation through the synthesis and recognition
of AHL signaling molecules. For human and plant pathogens, AHL-based
communication systems allow a microbial community to strategically
induce or repress expression of genes, specifically alleles
encoding putative virulence factors, in response to environmental
stimuli. Several reports have identified functional QS systems
in various
Burkholderia species and have shown that these bacterial
communication networks both positively and negatively regulate
numerous extracellular virulence factors in addition to contributing
to animal pathogenicity (
B. cepacia) (
1,
3,
20,
21,
31,
34,
36).
The B. mallei QS system is extremely complex and is comprised of multiple luxIR homologues (Fig. 1). Our genome analysis in silico indicated that the B. pseudomallei and B. mallei QS networks are genetically similar, and as with B. pseudomallei, B. mallei does not encode a putative LuxS system (Fig. 1) (34). While our findings were under review, Valade et al. characterized two of the eight luxIR genes carried by B. pseudomallei (36). The pmlIR QS genes reported by Valade et al. correspond to the B. mallei bmaIR1 QS alleles characterized in this work (36). Interestingly, our in silico and in vitro (PCRs of internal gene amplicons) analyses indicated that B. mallei does not carry two of the luxIR pairs (bpmIR2) that were identified in the B. pseudomallei DD503 genome (34). Although they are preliminary, and considering that B. mallei is a pathoadaptive obligate mammalian pathogen as well as proposed to be a clone of B. pseudomallei (14), these findings suggest that these QS alleles are not required for the in vivo pathogenicity of B. mallei. This hypothesis is further supported by the observation that the B. mallei ATCC 23344 genome is 1.5 Mb smaller than the B. pseudomallei K96243 chromosomes (data not shown). Through the evolution and divergence of B. mallei from B. pseudomallei, we hypothesize that B. mallei has undergone genomic modifications (i.e., insertion sequence-mediated deletions) that have resulted in the loss of the additional luxIR (bpmIR2) pair that is carried by B. pseudomallei and Burkholderia thailandensis (34, 35).
It has been proposed that microbial species carrying multiple luxIR genes obtain these alleles through horizontal gene transfer (16). In some instances, these horizontally acquired segments of nucleic acid deviate in G+C content compared to the recipient host. The relative G+C ratio of the ORFs carrying the putative B. mallei luxIR homologues as well as the flanking genes is consistent with the overall G+C content of the B. mallei genome, suggesting that these QS alleles have been present throughout the evolution of this highly infectious Burkholderia species (data not shown).
Our initial approach for AHL detection and characterization, which had limited success, incorporated thin-layer chromatography overlays with the bioreporter strain A. tumefaciens NTL4. To circumvent these limitations, we performed MS with culture extracts of B. mallei and each luxI mutant. In supernatants from B. mallei, the signaling molecules C8-HSL and C10-HSL were detected (Table 4). As with B. mallei, it was recently shown that B. pseudomallei 008 produces C10-HSL via the PmlI protein (36). Similar to B. mallei, with the exception of N-(3-oxotetradecanoyl)-L-homoserine lactone, B. pseudomallei DD503 synthesizes C8-HSL, 3-hydroxy-C8-HSL, C10-HSL, and 3-hydroxy-C10-HSL (34). Furthermore, it has been shown that culture extracts from B. thailandensis DW503, a closely related Burkholderia species to B. mallei and B. pseudomallei, contain the signaling molecules N-hexanoyl-homoserine lactone, C8-HSL, and C10-HSL (35). Surprisingly, disruption of the B. mallei luxI homologues had a marginal effect on AHL biosynthesis, and in fact, mutagenesis of these genes resulted in the detection of signaling molecules that were not identified in wild-type B. mallei supernatants (Table 4). There are multiple scenarios that may have contributed to these observations: (i) the B. mallei genome may encode an additional LuxI protein(s), (ii) the B. mallei LuxI proteins may interact with multiple acyl-acyl carrier proteins (i.e., QS is involved in cellular metabolism), and (iii) the BmaI1 and BmaI3 proteins may synthesize overlapping signaling molecules. With regard to the hypothesis that QS in B. mallei may be involved in carbon metabolism (i.e., it may affect the biosynthesis of AHL precursors), it has been shown at the transcriptional level that QS in P. aeruginosa both positively and negatively regulates numerous enzymes that are involved in carbon metabolism (27, 39). Likewise, mutagenesis of the B. thailandensis QS system and enzymatic cleavage of the AHLs produced by this closely related Burkholderia species also affect substrate utilization (32, 35). To determine if the BmaI1 and BmaI3 proteins produce overlapping signaling molecules, each B. mallei luxI homologue was heterologously expressed in E. coli, and the AHL profiles were monitored. Table 4 clearly demonstrates that with the exception of 3-hydroxy-C8-HSL (unique to RJ23) and 3-hydroxy-C10-HSL (found only in RJ24 extracts), the BmaI1 and BmaI3 proteins, when expressed in E. coli, produce structurally similar AHLs, which may account for the AHL profiles observed for the B. mallei luxI mutants. However, before any definitive conclusions with regard to AHL biosynthesis can be made, it will be necessary to construct multideletion B. mallei luxI strains. Despite these fluctuations in AHL accumulation following mutagenesis of the B. mallei luxI homologues, definitive phenotypes for the bmaI1 (RJ16) and bmaI3 (RJ17) mutants were confirmed by the use of two independent animal models, indicating that AHL biosynthesis plays an essential role, either directly or indirectly, in the virulence of B. mallei. As proposed for B. pseudomallei DD503, it is possible that the timing of biosynthesis and the concentration of the B. mallei signaling molecules are important for in vivo pathogenicity.
It was recently demonstrated by the use of murine models of infection that QS is involved in the pathogenicity of B. cepacia and B. pseudomallei (1, 31, 34, 36). Mutagenesis of the B. mallei QS alleles caused a significant reduction in animal mortality compared to the mortality of mice aerosolized with wild-type B. mallei (Fig. 2). The most notable decrease in pathogenicity was observed for strains containing disruptions in the bmaI1 (RJ16) and bmaI3 (RJ17) luxI homologues (Fig. 2). Additionally, inactivation of the bmaR5 (RJ20) gene resulted in a drastic reduction in animal mortality compared to that with wild-type B. mallei (Fig. 2). In fact, 100% of the animals (10 for each group) that were exposed to RJ16 (bmaI1 mutant), RJ17 (bmaI3 mutant), and RJ20 (bmaR5 mutant) survived an aerosol challenge of 104 CFU, representing 10 LD50s (Fig. 2). As with the aerosol BALB/c model, a reduction in virulence was also observed for several of the B. mallei QS mutants in Syrian hamsters (Table 5). Similar to the BALB/c aerosolization results, although to a lesser degree, RJ16 (bmaI1 mutant), RJ17 (bmaI3 mutant), RJ19 (bmaR2 mutant), and RJ20 (bmaR5 mutant) demonstrated the largest reductions in pathogenicity compared to wild-type B. mallei (Table 5). Interestingly, 70% of the mice that were exposed to RJ18 (bmaR1 mutant) survived the challenge, whereas in hamsters RJ18 exhibited an LD50 similar to that of wild-type B. mallei (Fig. 2 and Table 5). These findings suggest that the B. mallei QS system may regulate unidentified host-specific virulence factors that are needed for mouse versus hamster pathogenicity.
For B. cepacia and B. pseudomallei, QS has been shown to both negatively and positively regulate the biosynthesis of potential extracellular virulence factors (1, 20, 21, 36). Recently, we found that QS in B. thailandensis DW503, a species that is closely related to B. mallei and B. pseudomallei, both positively and negatively regulates lipase and beta-hemolytic activities, swarming and twitching motilities, and carbon metabolism (32, 35). With the exception of swarming and twitching motilities (B. mallei is nonmotile), B. mallei and each QS mutant were tested for defects in beta-hemolytic, protease, lipase, and phospholipase C activities. It should be noted that B. mallei as well as B. thailandensis are normally nonhemolytic; however, mutagenesis of the B. thailandensis luxIR genes resulted in enhanced ß-hemolysis of sheep erythrocytes (35). Surprisingly, and consistent with the case for mutagenesis of the B. pseudomallei DD503 QS network, the phenotypes of the parental and mutant strains of B. mallei were identical (data not shown). These results suggest that QS in B. mallei does not regulate a factor(s) that contributes to beta-hemolytic, lipase, protease, and phospholipase C activities.
For B. mallei, the only definitive virulence determinants that have been shown to be required for pathogenicity are an extracellular capsule and type III secretion (5, 33). A transmission electron microscopy analysis of capsule biosynthesis in each B. mallei QS mutant indicated that capsule production was not affected (data not shown). We are currently using whole-genome DNA microarrays to determine if QS affects the transcription of the B. mallei type III secretion operon. The B. mallei QS system represents one of the most complex intraspecies communication systems identified for obligate mammalian pathogens. These findings for two animal models of infection clearly demonstrate that QS plays an essential role in the in vivo pathogenicity of B. mallei. Further studies, utilizing whole-genome DNA microarrays, will be needed to identify the virulence factor(s) regulated by this intricate bacterial cell signaling network.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We thank Melanie Ulrich, Tim Hoover, William Day, Jeffery Adamovicz,
and Katheryn Kenyon for critically reviewing the manuscript;
Marilyn England and David Waag for measuring IgG titers; the
USAMRIID Aerobiology Division for directing the aerosol challenges;
and Lynda Miller, Anthony Bassett, Kathy Kuehl, and Ron Lind
for their technical assistance.
This research was sponsored by the Medical Biological Defense Research Program, U.S. Army Medical Research and Material Command (project 02-4-5X-026).
All research was conducted in compliance with the Animal Welfare Act and other federal statutes and regulations relating to animals and experiments involving animals and adhered to principles stated in the Guide for the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals, National Research Council, 1996. The facility where this research was conducted is fully accredited by the Association for the Assessment and Accreditation of Laboratory Animal Care International.
Opinions, interpretations, conclusions, and recommendations are those of the authors and are not necessarily endorsed by the U.S. Army.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address for Ricky L. Ulrich: Bacteriology Division, USAMRIID, 1425 Porter St., Fort Detrick, MD 21702. Phone: (301) 619-8332. Fax: (301) 619-2152. E-mail:
Ricky.Ulrich{at}amedd.army.mil. Present address for Jeffrey A. Jeddeloh: Orion Genomics, 4041 Forest Park, St. Louis, MO 63108. Phone: (314) 615-6382. Fax: (314) 615-6975. E-mail:
jjeddeloh{at}oriongenomics.com.

Editor: J. B. Bliska

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Infection and Immunity, November 2004, p. 6589-6596, Vol. 72, No. 11
0019-9567/04/$08.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/IAI.72.11.6589-6596.2004
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