4.4 Article

Aerobactin, but Not Yersiniabactin, Salmochelin, or Enterobactin, Enables the Growth/Survival of Hypervirulent (Hypermucoviscous) Klebsiella pneumoniae Ex Vivo and In Vivo

Journal

INFECTION AND IMMUNITY
Volume 83, Issue 8, Pages 3325-3333

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/IAI.00430-15

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [1R21AI088318-01A1]
  2. Department of Veterans Affairs
  3. Telemedicine and Advance Technical Research Center (TATRC) cooperative agreement [W81XWH-11-2-0218]
  4. NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF ALLERGY AND INFECTIOUS DISEASES [R21AI088318] Funding Source: NIH RePORTER

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The siderophore aerobactin is the dominant siderophore produced by hypervirulent Klebsiella pneumoniae (hvKP) and was previously shown to be a major virulence factor in systemic infection. However, strains of hvKP commonly produce the additional siderophores yersiniabactin, salmochelin, and enterobactin. The roles of these siderophores in hvKP infection have not been optimally defined. To that end, site-specific gene disruptions were created in hvKP1 (wild type), resulting in the generation of hvKP1 Delta iucA (aerobactin deficient), hvKP1 Delta iroB (salmochelin deficient), hvKP1 Delta entB (enterobactin and salmochelin deficient), hvKP1 Delta irp2 (yersiniabactin deficient), and hvKP1 Delta entB Delta irp2 (enterobactin, salmochelin, and yersiniabactin deficient). The growth/survival of these constructs was compared to that of their wild-type parent hvKP1 ex vivo in human ascites fluid, human serum, and human urine and in vivo in mouse systemic infection and pulmonary challenge models. Interestingly, in contrast to aerobactin, the inability to produce enterobactin, salmochelin, or yersiniabactin individually or in combination did not decrease the ex vivo growth/survival in human ascites or serum or decrease virulence in the in vivo infection models. Surprisingly, none of the siderophores increased growth in human urine. In human ascites fluid supplemented with exogenous siderophores, siderophores increased the growth of hvKP1 Delta iucA, with the relative activity being enterobactin > aerobactin > yersini-abactin > salmochelin, suggesting that the contribution of aerobactin to virulence is dependent on both innate biologic activity and quantity produced. Taken together, these data confirm and extend a role for aerobactin as a critical virulence factor for hvKP. Since it appears that aerobactin production is a defining trait of hvKP strains, this factor is a potential antivirulence target.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.4
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available