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Infection and Immunity, August 2005, p. 4888-4894, Vol. 73, No. 8
0019-9567/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/IAI.73.8.4888-4894.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Fsr-Independent Production of Protease(s) May Explain the Lack of Attenuation of an Enterococcus faecalis fsr Mutant Versus a gelE-sprE Mutant in Induction of Endocarditis
Kavindra V. Singh,1,2
Sreedhar R. Nallapareddy,1,2
Esteban C. Nannini,1,2,
and
Barbara E. Murray1,2,3*
Center for the Study of Emerging and Reemerging Pathogens,1
Division of Infectious Diseases, Department of Internal Medicine,2
Department of Microbiology and Molecular Genetics, The University of Texas Medical School at Houston, Houston, Texas 770303
Received 17 December 2004/
Returned for modification 26 January 2005/
Accepted 21 March 2005

ABSTRACT
An
Enterococcus faecalis gelE insertion disruption mutant (TX5128),
which produces neither gelatinase (GelE) nor the cotranscribed
(in the wild type) serine protease (SprE), was found to be attenuated
in a rat endocarditis model with a significant decrease in the
endocarditis induction rate versus wild-type
E. faecalis OG1RF
(GelE
+, SprE
+). TX5266, which has a nonpolar deletion in
fsrB and, like TX5128, is phenotypically GelE
under usual
conditions, was also studied;
fsrB is a homologue of
agrB of
staphylococci and participates in regulation of
gelE-sprE expression.
Unexpectedly, TX5266 approximated wild-type OG1RF in the endocarditis
model and was significantly less attenuated than TX5128. This
is in contrast to other models which have found
fsr mutants
to be as or more attenuated than TX5128. Further study found
that the
fsrB mutant produced very low levels of gelatinase
activity after prolonged incubation in vitro versus no gelatinase
activity with TX5128 and did not show the extensive chaining
characteristic of TX5128. Reverse transcription-PCR confirmed
that
gelE was expressed in TX5266 at a very low level versus
wild-type OG1RF and was not expressed at all in TX5128. Possible
explanations for the increased induction of endocarditis by
TX5266 versus TX5128 include the production of low levels of
protease(s) or some other effect(s) of the inactivation of the
E. faecalis fsr regulator. The equivalent ability of OG1RF and
its
fsr mutant to initiate endocarditis may explain why we did
not find naturally occurring
fsr mutants, which account for
ca. 35% of
E. faecalis isolates, unrepresented in endocarditis
versus fecal isolates (J. C. Roberts, K. V. Singh, P. C. Okhuysen,
and B. E. Murray, J. Clin. Microbiol.
42:2317-2320, 2004).

INTRODUCTION
We have previously described the
fsr locus, a regulatory system
of
Enterococcus faecalis and a homologue of staphylococcal
agr loci, and shown that it encodes a quorum-sensing system that
positively regulates the expression of gelatinase and serine
protease (encoded by the cotranscribed
gelE and
sprE genes)
via the Fsr-dependent
gelE promoter (
20,
21). We have also reported
absence of a 23.9-kb region, as originally described by Nakayama
and colleagues (
16), in ca. 35% of 215
E. faecalis isolates
tested; this deletion results in loss of
fsrA,
fsrB, and part
of
fsrC, resulting in an
fsr-
gelE locus functionally equivalent
to constructed
fsr mutants (
24). OG1RF mutants with an insertion
disruption in the
gelE or
fsr genes have shown significant delays
in mortality in a mouse peritonitis model (
21,
27), and a nonpolar
fsrB deletion mutant (TX5266) (
20) showed even more attenuation
than a
gelE disruption mutant in a
Caenorhabditis elegans infection
model (
26) and a rabbit endophthalmitis model (
6,
7,
14,
26).
The first reports implicating an important role for gelatinase
in biofilm formation were by Mohamed et al. (J. A. Mohamed,
K. V. Singh, W. Huang, F. Teng, B. E. Murray, Abstr. 43rd Intersci.
Conf. Antimicrob. Agents Chemother., abstr. B-821, 2003) and
Kristich et al. (
11). We have also shown that Fsr mutants show
decreased biofilm production (
12,
31), albeit to a slightly
but significantly lesser extent than the gelatinase and serine
protease mutant (Gel
, Spr
) TX5128, and both TX5128
and Fsr mutants showed markedly decreased translocation across
intestinal T84 cells (
33). The
fsr mutants are phenotypically
nonproducers of GelE and SprE by standard assay (
21), which
was presumed to explain, at least in part, their attenuation
in animal models and their effect on translocation and biofilm
(
12,
31). The importance of gelatinase for biofilm formation
was recently confirmed using purified enzyme (
9).
Neither an fsr nor a protease mutant has been studied in an endocarditis model. However, data from Gutschik et al. (8) using 10 nonisogenic "Streptococcus faecalis" (5 Gel+ and 5 Gel) strains showed that rabbits inoculated with proteolytic strains had significantly shorter survival times and more emboli than those inoculated with nonproteolytic strains. In the present study, we compared a nonpolar fsrB deletion mutant (TX5266) (20), the gelE insertion disruption mutant (TX5128) (21), and wild-type E. faecalis strain OG1RF (13) for induction of endocarditis in a rat model and found that TX5128 was significantly more attenuated than the wild type or the fsr mutant. We also found low-level expression of gelE in the fsr mutant, which may explain its being less attenuated. Another explanation, supported by C. elegans and rabbit endopthalmitis models, is that Fsr regulates other genes besides gelE-sprE, as is true for the Agr systems in Staphylococcus aureus.

MATERIALS AND METHODS
Bacterial strains.
Bacteria used (Table
1) include wild-type OG1RF (Gel
+, Spr
+)
(
13), the
fsrB deletion mutant TX5266, and the
gelE insertion
disruption mutant TX5128 (
10,
21); the latter two are Gel
using a standard plate assay, (
20,
21) and by Northern blot
analysis we had previously shown that
gelE and
sprE are cotranscribed
in OG1RF and no
sprE mRNA is detected in TX5128 (
21). TX5283
(
20) is the
fsrB deletion mutant TX5266 containing the shuttle
vector pTCV-
lac with promoterless
lacZ (
19), while TX5286 is
TX5266 carrying pTEX5270 (
gelE promoter::
lacZ fusion in pTCV-
lac)
(
20). Brain heart infusion broth (BHI) (Difco Laboratories,
Detroit, Mich.) was used to grow bacterial cultures. Antibiotics
kanamycin (Kan) and erythromycin (Ery) were purchased from Sigma
Chemical Co., St. Louis, Mo. The concentration of antibiotics
used in BHI agar plates for the growth of TX5128 was 2,000 µg/ml
Kan and for TX5283 and TX5286 was 10 µg/ml Ery.
Endocarditis model.
For preparation for administration to rats, bacteria were grown
overnight at 37°C with or without (for OG1RF) antibiotics
in 10 ml of BHI broth (Difco Laboratories, Detroit, Mich.) with
gentle shaking. Cells were pelleted for 10 min (10,000 rpm at
4 to 6°C), washed once with 0.9% saline, and resuspended
in 10 ml of saline. Further dilutions were also prepared in
saline and optical density was adjusted, and suspensions were
plated to determine the actual inocula administered. Infective
aortic valve endocarditis was established in male Sprague-Dawley
rats using previously published methods (
25) with some modifications
and following interpretation criteria described by others (
3,
4,
25,
32). In brief, the animals were anesthetized with isoflurane
for placement of intravascular catheters. The right carotid
artery was exposed and a sterile polyethylene catheter (PE10;
inside and outside diameters, 0.28 and 0.61 mm, respectively;
Braintree Scientific, Braintree, MA) was inserted through a
small incision and advanced to

3.5 cm across the aortic valve
into the left ventricle. Proper positioning was assured by feeling
the resistance and vigorous pulsation of the line. Twenty minutes
after catheterization, each rat was inoculated via the catheter
with 0.5 ml of test bacteria in a range of 10
3 to 10
7 CFU in
0.9% saline. After inoculation, the catheter was heat sealed
and left in place during the course of experiments (
18,
28),
and the skin was closed with sutures. Rats were euthanized by
CO
2 inhalation at

24 h, the aortic valves were examined, the
vegetations were excised, weighed, and homogenized in 0.5 ml
saline, and dilutions were plated on BHI agar and/or BHI agar
plus 2,000 µg/ml Kan where appropriate to confirm retention
of disruption mutations. Rats with sterile cultures of their
undiluted vegetation homogenates were considered to have had
no induction of endocarditis (
4). The 50% infective dose (ID
50)
values were calculated by a previously published method (
23).
Randomly picked
fsrB deletion mutant colonies recovered from
infected vegetations were also tested by PCR to reconfirm the
deletions. The activity of OG1RF and TX5266 was reconfirmed
in the mouse peritonitis (
26). Our protocol was preapproved
by the Animal Welfare Committee, The University of Texas Health
Science Center, Houston, Texas. Fisher's exact test was used
to compare the rates of induction of endocarditis among test
bacteria and to compare the percentages of numbers of cells
per chain (

2 cells/chain versus

3 cells/chain) among OG1RF,
TX5266, and TX5128.
Gelatinase and cell morphology.
Screening for gelatinase production was done as described previously using 3% gelatin on Todd-Hewitt agar plates with incubation at 37°C for 24 h (5, 24). After some plates were accidentally left at ambient temperature for prolonged periods (3 weeks), we then systematically assessed gelatinase production after an initial incubation of 24 h at 37°C followed by a prolonged incubation of 16 to 20 days at room temperature. A previously published assay (15) for gelatinase activity using Azocoll (Azo dye-impregnated collagen, 0.25 g, <50 mesh; Calbiochem, Darmstadt, Germany) as substrate was also used to detect proteolytic activity of 24-h- and 12-day-old broth cultures of OG1RF, the fsrB deletion mutant TX5266, and the gelE insertion disruption mutant TX5128. We also determined the activity of the gelE promoter in 24-h-grown cultures of TX5286 (TX5266 carrying the gelE promoter-lacZ fusion) by comparing it with TX5283 (TX5266 carrying pTCV-lac with promoterless lacZ) and using 2-nitrophenyl-ß-D-galactopyranoside (Sigma-Aldrich, St. Louis, MO) as a substrate described in previously published methods (19, 20). For the ß-galactosidase assay, the experiment was performed in quadruplicate.
For cell morphology examination, bacteria were grown under the same conditions as those described above for experimental endocarditis sections. Cells were washed once with saline and resuspended in saline, and a 1:10 dilution was prepared resulting in
1 x 108 CFU/ml of bacterial suspension. Bacterial cells from
1 x 108 stock suspension were Gram stained (Difco Laboratories) and were viewed by phase-contrast microscopy (magnification, 1,250x) with an Olympus BX60 (Leeds Instruments, Inc., Dallas, TX). The number of cells per chain was also counted under light microscopy in 16 randomly chosen microscopic fields, and data were analyzed.
RNA extraction and reverse transcription-PCR (RT-PCR).
RNA was extracted from cultures grown overnight in BHI broth medium and using RNeasy kits (QIAGEN Sciences, MD) from OG1RF, TX5128, and TX5266. Extracted RNA samples were treated two to three times with 20 U of RQ1 RNase-Free DNase (Promega, Madison, WI) to remove possible DNA contamination from the samples. RT-PCR was performed by using SuperScript One-Step kits (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA) following the manufacturer's recommendations. Primers used for RT-PCR are listed in Table 2. Intragenic primers used for mRNA gelE expression were designed from a OG1-10 gelE sequence (29) while the internal control primers used in the study for unrelated genes were based on intragenic regions of a 16S rRNA sequence we have previously used in Lactococcus lactis (2) and E. faecalis studies and gls24 (30) of E. faecalis. Various concentrations (200 ng, 20 ng, and 5 ng/reaction) of total RNA/reaction were used in RT-PCR. Processed RNA from OG1RF, TX5266, and TX5128 was also used in PCRs with Platinum Taq DNA polymerase (Invitrogen) to detect DNA contamination. The RT-PCR conditions consisted of 1 cycle at 49°C for 30 min for cDNA synthesis and then 1 cycle at 94°C for 2 min for predenaturation, followed by 29 cycles consisting of denaturation at 94°C for 30 s, annealing at 55°C for 45 s, and extension at 72°C for 1 min, followed by 1 cycle of extension at 72°C for 10 min. The total reaction volume was 50 µl, and 10 µl was loaded on the agarose gel for viewing the amplified products.

RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
Experimental endocarditis.
The development of infective endocarditis using wild-type OG1RF,
the
fsrB deletion mutant (TX5266), and the
gelE insertion mutant
(TX5128) was evaluated for various challenge inocula. The ID
50 of the percent of vegetations infected and
P values are shown
in Table
3, and the geometric means of the inocula in half-log
increments and the moving average of the percentage of infected
rats are shown in Fig.
1. Wild-type OG1RF at inocula of 10
3 and 10
4 CFU showed 0% and 12% endocarditis induction rate, while
at inocula of 10
5, 10
6, and 10
7 CFU OG1RF showed endocarditis
induction rate of 61%, 78%, and 100%, respectively. The ID
50 of OG1RF was determined to be 1.6
x 10
5 CFU.
View this table:
[in this window]
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|
TABLE 3. Experimental endocarditis induction in a rat model with wild-type E. faecalis strain OG1RF, its fsrB deletion mutant TX5266, and its gelE insertion mutant TX5128
|
The ID
50 of the
gelE-
sprE mutant (TX5128) was determined to
be 1.8
x 10
6 CFU, approximately 12 times that of wild-type OG1RF.
Because it would require inordinately large numbers of animals
to statistically compare ID
50s, we instead compared the percentage
of rats infected with different inocula. At inocula of 10
5 and
10
6 CFU, TX5128 infected significantly fewer vegetations than
wild-type OG1RF (3 out of 19 and 6 out of 17 [16% and 35%] with
TX5128 versus 11 out of 18 and 11 out of 14 [61% and 78%] with
OG1RF;
P = 0.0069 and 0.0292, respectively), while at the highest
inoculum of 10
7 CFU, 100% of vegetations were infected for both
organisms (Table
3). The attenuation of TX5128 in comparison
to the wild-type strain OG1RF is consistent with it being less
virulent in other published animal models (
6,
14,
21,
26,
27).
It should also be noted that, in the present study, we tried
to use equivalent numbers of CFU of test bacteria to infect
animals; indeed, the geometric means of the CFU of the inocula
(Fig.
1) of TX5128 were actually slightly greater than those
of OG1RF and TX5266 for two of the three inocula showing marked
differences. Moreover, our observations here, as well as previously
published reports, of chaining (possibly because of less maturation
of the muramidase-1 autolysin) of the mutant TX5128 (
22,
31)
implies that we delivered an even higher number of actual TX5128
cells (Fig.
3) in the inoculum than was deduced from CFU counts.
The nonpolar
fsrB deletion mutant TX5266 has been shown to be
highly attenuated versus wild-type OG1RF in mouse peritonitis,
C. elegans (
7,
26), and rabbit endophthalmitis (
6,
14) models.
In
C. elegans and the endophthalmitis model, TX5266 was even
more attenuated than the double protease mutant TX5128 (
6,
26).
However, in the present study, it was similar to OG1RF and was
significantly less attenuated at a 10
6 CFU inoculum than the
double protease mutant TX5128 (
P = 0.0137) (Table
3). TX5266
showed 0 out of 4, 4 out of 9, and 6 out of 6 (0%, 44%, and
100%) infected vegetations at inocula of 10
3, 10
5, and >10
6 CFU, respectively (Fig.
1), and the ID
50 was determined to be
3.0
x 10
5, very close to that of OG1RF. TX5266 was also noted
to have much less chaining than TX5128 but slightly more chaining
than OG1RF (Fig.
3). To test the possibility that a secondary
mutation had occurred that restored virulence, the TX5266 culture
used in these experiments was retested in the mouse peritonitis
model and found to be as highly attenuated as previously reported
(
26 and data not shown). The current literature also shows that
mutations affecting
agr of
S. aureus have been tested in a variety
of animal models, including endocarditis (
4), septic arthritis
(
1), and mouse peritoneal sepsis (J. Yu, C. Bellinger-Kawahara,
P. Winterberg, K. Francis, Abstr. 102nd Gen. Meet. Am. Soc.
Microbiol., abstr. B-322, 2002), and it has been shown that
agr mutants were attenuated in endocarditis (
4) and septic arthritis
models (
1) versus no virulence attenuation in a low-inoculum
(versus our studies with OG1RF) mouse peritoneal sepsis model
(
17).
Investigation of gelE and gelatinase expression.
Although fsr mutants, including TX5266, do not produce detectable gelatinase in the standard plate assay (20, 21), we serendipitously noted in the current study, having left some plates at room temperature for weeks, that there was a small amount of gelatinase activity observed with TX5266 (but not TX5128) in the plate assay. Using Azocoll (three independent determinations), very low levels of proteolytic activity were also observed with TX5266 with 12-day- but not 1-day-old cultures versus no activity in TX5128, while the wild-type strain OG1RF showed high proteolytic activity (data not shown) at both time points.
Since the low-level gelatinase activity could be related to basal or stress-induced expression from the gelE promoter or, alternatively, from activation of an unidentified proteolytic activity, we next examined our gelE promoter::lacZ fusion construct (20) using 24-h-grown cultures of TX5286 (TX5266 carrying the gelE promoter-lacZ fusion in pTCV-lac). A slightly increased level of ß-galactosidase activity of the gelE promoter was observed (quadruplicate determination) versus TX5283 (TX5266 carrying the shuttle vector pTCV-lac) (data not shown).
We also applied RT-PCR to RNA obtained from 24-h-grown cultures. Results (Fig. 2) showed that, with the fsrB deletion mutant TX5266, no transcript was seen with 5 ng total RNA; using RNA concentrations of 20 and 200 ng, gelE transcript was observed but was much less than that obtained with wild-type OG1RF (Fig. 2A, lanes 1, 4, and 7 of OG1RF versus lanes 2, 5, and 8 of TX5266). No RT-PCR-amplified bands were detected with RNA from TX5128 (Fig. 2A, lanes 3, 6, and 9), consistent with the disruption of gelE (20) and the lack of detectable gelatinase activity by TX5128 on Todd-Hewitt agar-gelatin plates even after prolonged incubation of
12 days. Control genes gls24 and 16S rRNA showed similar amounts of amplified bands in OG1RF, TX5266, and TX5128 (Fig. 2B and C). We did not see RT-PCR-amplified bands with total RNA of TX5266 from a 20-day-old culture, suggesting that the low level of gelatinase activity observed on plates may be due to the accumulative effect of gelatinase produced, while the mRNA may have been degraded after such prolonged incubation. We also found evidence of expression by RT-PCR using 4-h cultures with amounts of mRNA again much reduced for TX5266 versus OG1RF. We previously were unable to detect gelE mRNA in fsrA, fsrB, and fsrC mutants from cells in exponential phase (
4 h) by RT-PCR (21). The difference in the current study may be that we used a different set of primers or that the methodology for RT-PCR is more sensitive than what was used 6 years ago.
Chaining.
The distribution of the number of cells per chain of OG1RF,
TX5266, and TX5128 is shown in Fig.
3, which confirms our previous
results (
31) with TX5128 and also shows that TX5128 displayed
much more chaining than TX5266 (
P = <0.0001); TX5266, in
turn, showed slightly more chaining than OG1RF (
P = 0.0212).
Complementation of TX5128 (Gel
, Spr
) and a
gelE deletion mutant (TX5264) with
gelE in
trans was previously shown
to restore the diplococcus morphology of these strains (
31),
indicating that gelatinase is sufficient for restoration. Residual,
low-level gelatinase with or without serine protease production
may be the reason that the
fsrB deletion mutant had mostly diplococcal
chains, with only a small number of longer chains relative to
the
gelE insertion mutant (TX5128) which showed almost all the
cells in longer chains with a small number present as diplococci
(Fig.
3); alternatively, this difference could be due to another
effect of the
fsr disruption.
One limitation of this work is that we have not, because of the cost and labor requirements of this model, distinguished between effects of gelatinase and serine protease nor tested complemented mutants. In addition, whether TX5128 is attenuated because of effects resulting from loss of proteolytic activity on E. faecalis cells themselves (e.g., increased chaining) or because of a direct effect of protease(s) on host tissues or cells is not known. Moreover, this model only assessed the ability of bacteria to cause endocarditis, not whether the protease(s) had effects on disease manifestations, as was suggested by the study of Gutschik et al. (8), in which Gel+ strains had more evidence of systemic disease and embolic phenomena than nonisogenic Gel strains. Since Fsr activation would be expected to occur in vegetations due to high organism density, which should then be followed by increased protease production, we envision that there could be subsequent proteolytic digestion of vegetations. Of note, in preliminary studies in rabbits, we noted a different consistency of vegetations, with soft, friable ones with OG1RF versus hard, nonfriable ones with TX5128 (unpublished observations). We would also like to point out that, in the current model, bacteria were inoculated after 20 min of catheterization and vegetations were studied 24 h after bacterial challenge; thus, bacteria were colonizing early vegetation lesions, not mature vegetations, leaving open the possibility that the outcome may be different if more mature vegetations (e.g.,
48 h after catheterization) were to be studied.
It is of interest that, in our recent survey of 215 E. faecalis, we found that, although the gelE gene is present in over 90% of isolates, less than 65% had a functional fsr locus and produced gelatinase by routine assay; i.e., many isolates phenotypically mimic constructed fsr mutants. Since gelatinase production and fsr function have been shown to contribute to virulence in several models, as well as to biofilm production (11, 12) and translocation across T84 cells (33), it was intriguing to find that the fsr mutant studied here was not diminished in its ability to initiate endocarditis. This may explain a failure to find differences in the percentage of gelatinase-positive isolates or of isolates with an intact fsr locus between endocarditis and fecal isolates (5, 24). Our finding of low-level expression of gelatinase by the fsr mutant suggests that basal expression of protease activity could be what allows both Fsr+ and Fsr E. faecalis to initiate endocarditis equally well. In contrast, in the peritonitis model, which involves inoculation of a large number of bacteria (
108) into a very small space, a major difference was observed between wild-type OG1RF and both TX5128 and TX5266, particularly in terms of the rapidity of death. It is likely that this high number of organisms of OG1RF administered locally activates the fsr-gel locus via quorum sensing and results in local protease production. On the other hand, the inoculation of 106 to 107 organisms intravenously, plus their subsequent dispersion and dilution in the bloodstream, as with an endocarditis model, would result in such a low density of circulating organisms that there would not be activation of fsr, at least until vegetations are formed. Thus, following intravenous inoculation, we predict that fsr activation would neither be seen nor be expected during the bloodstream phase, nor would there be an increase in gelatinase production over basal levels, even with organisms fully capable of doing so. That basal levels of gelatinase are sufficient to allow induction of endocarditis is supported by the near equal ability of TX5266 to OG1RF to cause endocarditis; an alternative hypothesis is that some other effect of the loss of fsr function restores this ability.
In conclusion, a Gel, Spr mutant, TX5128, showed a significantly decreased rate of induction of endocarditis in comparison to wild-type E. faecalis OG1RF as well as in comparison to the very slow protease producer TX5266 (an fsrB deletion mutant), which in turn was not significantly attenuated versus OG1RF. This lesser degree of attenuation of TX5266 is similar, qualitatively, to our previous report showing less reduction in biofilm production with fsr mutants than with TX5128 (12). These results are in contrast to results from the rabbit endophthalmitis and the C. elegans model in which TX5266 was more attenuated than TX5128. The endocarditis model and biofilm results may be explainable by fsr-independent gelE expression. On the other hand, models showing greater attenuation of fsr mutants suggest that the fsr genes affect more than just protease production, as is the case for the homologous agr system in staphylococci; this possibility will be addressed in future studies.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This work was supported in part by NIH grant R37 AI 47923 from
the Division of Microbiology and Infectious Diseases, NIAID,
to Barbara E. Murray.
We express our sincere thanks to Gary M. Dunny, Pat Schlievert, and John McCormick, University of Minnesota Medical School, Minneapolis, Minn., for helping us learn the cardiac catheterization techniques for the experimental endocarditis model.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Division of Infectious Diseases, Center for the Study of Emerging and Re-emerging Pathogens, University of Texas Medical School at Houston, 6431 Fannin, 2.112 MSB, Houston, TX 77030. Phone: (713) 500-6745. Fax: (713) 500-6766. E-mail:
bem.asst{at}uth.tmc.edu.

Editor: F. C. Fang
Present address: Córdoba 1614, Rosario (2000), Argentina. 

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Infection and Immunity, August 2005, p. 4888-4894, Vol. 73, No. 8
0019-9567/05/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/IAI.73.8.4888-4894.2005
Copyright © 2005, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
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