4.8 Article

Toxin B is essential for virulence of Clostridium difficile

Journal

NATURE
Volume 458, Issue 7242, Pages 1176-1181

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nature07822

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Australian National Health and Medical Research Council [284214]
  2. ARC Centre of Excellence in Structural and Functional Microbial Genomics
  3. United States National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases [AIO57637]
  4. United States Department of Veterans Affairs Research Service

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Clostridium difficile is the leading cause of infectious diarrhoea in hospitals worldwide, because of its virulence, spore-forming ability and persistence(1,2). C. difficile-associated diseases are induced by antibiotic treatment or disruption of the normal gastrointestinal flora(3,4). Recently, morbidity and mortality resulting from C. difficile-associated diseases have increased significantly due to changes in the virulence of the causative strains and antibiotic usage patterns(1,2,5,6). Since 2002, epidemic toxinotype III NAP1/027 strains(1,2), which produce high levels of the major virulence factors, toxin A and toxin B, have emerged. These toxins have 63 % amino acid sequence similarity(7) and are members of the large clostridial glucosylating toxin family, which are monoglucosyltransferases that are pro-inflammatory, cytotoxic and enterotoxic in the human colon(8-10). Inside host cells, both toxins catalyse the transfer of glucose onto the Rho family of GTPases, leading to cell death(8,11). However, the role of these toxins in the context of a C. difficile infection is unknown. Here we describe the construction of isogenic tcdA and tcdB (encoding toxin A and B, respectively) mutants of a virulent C. difficile strain and their use in the hamster disease model to show that toxin B is a key virulence determinant. Previous studies showed that purified toxin A alone can induce most of the pathology observed after infection of hamsters with C. difficile(8,9,12) and that toxin B is not toxic in animals unless it is co-administered with toxin A, suggesting that the toxins act synergistically(12). Our work provides evidence that toxin B, not toxin A, is essential for virulence. Furthermore, it is clear that the importance of these toxins in the context of infection cannot be predicted exclusively from studies using purified toxins, reinforcing the importance of using the natural infection process to dissect the role of toxins in disease.

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