4.7 Article

Effect of Environmental Temperatures on Proteome Composition of Salmonella enterica Serovar Typhimurium

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MOLECULAR & CELLULAR PROTEOMICS
卷 21, 期 8, 页码 -

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DOI: 10.1016/j.mcpro.2022.100265

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  1. [2813HS027 ?]

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This study provides initial insights into the complex adaptation of STM to different environmental temperatures and reveals that STM can infect not only mammalian hosts but also enter new infection routes. This has important implications for investigating global virulence factors, their impact on infection routes, and potential anti-infective strategies.
Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium (STM) is a major cause of gastroenteritis and transmitted by consumption of contaminated food. STM is associated to food origi-nating from animals (pork, chicken, eggs) or plants (veg-etables, fruits, nuts, and herbs). Infection of warm-blooded mammalian hosts by STM and the underlying complex regulatory network of virulence gene expression depend on various environmental conditions encountered in hosts. However, less is known about the proteome and possible regulatory networks for gene expression of STM outside the preferred host. Nutritional limitations and changes in temperature are the most obvious stresses outside the native host. Thus, we analyzed the proteome profile of STM grown in rich medium (LB medium) or minimal me-dium (PCN medium) at temperatures ranging from 8 degrees C to 37 degrees C. LB medium mimics the nutritional rich environment inside the host, whereas minimal PCN medium represents nutritional limitations outside the host, found during growth of fresh produce (field conditions). Further, the range of temperatures analyzed reflects conditions within natural hosts (37 degrees C), room temperature (20 degrees C), during growth under agricultural conditions (16 degrees C and 12 degrees C), and during food storage (8 degrees C). Implications of altered nutrient availability and growth temperature on STM proteomes were analyzed by HPLC/MS-MS and label-free quantification. Our study provides first insights into the complex adaptation of STM to various environmental temperatures, which allows STM not only to infect mammalian hosts but also to enter new infection routes that have been poorly studied so far. With the present dataset, global virulence factors, their impact on infection routes, and potential anti-infective strategies can now be investigated in detail. Especially, we were able to demonstrate functional flagella at 12 degrees C growth temperature for STM with an altered motility behavior.

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