4.4 Article

Identification of Genes Required for Long-Term Survival of Legionella pneumophila in Water

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MSPHERE
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AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/msphere.00454-22

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CRISPRi; Legionella; Tn-seq; persistence; starvation; virulence; water

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Water is the primary mode of transmission for Legionella pneumophila to humans, and the pathogen is well adapted to survive in water for extended periods. Prevention of L. pneumophila survival in water is crucial for preventing Legionnaires' disease. Understanding the determinants that facilitate survival in water can help in developing effective prevention strategies.
Water is the primary vector for transmission of L. pneumophila to humans, and the pathogen is adapted to persist in this environment for extended periods of time. Preventing survival of L. pneumophila in water is therefore critical for prevention of Legionnaires' disease. Long-term survival of Legionella pneumophila in aquatic environments is thought to be important for facilitating epidemic outbreaks. Eliminating bacterial colonization in plumbing systems is the primary strategy that depletes this reservoir and prevents disease. To uncover L. pneumophila determinants facilitating survival in water, a Tn-seq strategy was used to identify survival-defective mutants during 50-day starvation in tap water at 42 degrees C. The mutants with the most drastic survival defects carried insertions in electron transport chain genes, indicating that membrane energy charge and/or ATP synthesis requires the generation of a proton gradient by the respiratory chain to maintain survival in the presence of water stress. In addition, periplasmically localized proteins that are known (EnhC) or hypothesized (lpg1697) to stabilize the cell wall against turnover were essential for water survival. To test that the identified mutations disrupted water survival, candidate genes were knocked down by CRISPRi. The vast majority of knockdown strains with verified transcript depletion showed remarkably low viability after 50-day incubations. To demonstrate that maintenance of cell wall integrity was an important survival determinant, a deletion mutation in lpg1697, in a gene encoding a predicted l,d-transpeptidase domain, was analyzed. The loss of this gene resulted in increased osmolar sensitivity and carbenicillin hypersensitivity relative to the wild type, as predicted for loss of an l,d-transpeptidase. These results indicate that the L. pneumophila envelope has been evolutionarily selected to allow survival under conditions in which the bacteria are subjected to long-term exposure to starvation and low osmolar conditions.IMPORTANCE Water is the primary vector for transmission of L. pneumophila to humans, and the pathogen is adapted to persist in this environment for extended periods of time. Preventing survival of L. pneumophila in water is therefore critical for prevention of Legionnaires' disease. We analyzed dense transposon mutation pools for strains with severe survival defects during a 50-day water incubation at 42 degrees C. By tracking the associated transposon insertion sites in the genome, we defined a distinct essential gene set for water survival and demonstrate that a predicted peptidoglycan cross-linking enzyme, lpg1697, and components of the electron transport chain are required to ensure survival of the pathogen. Our results indicate that select characteristics of the cell wall and components of the respiratory chain of L. pneumophila are primary evolutionary targets being shaped to promote its survival in water.

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