Pulmonary infection by Yersinia pestis rapidly establishes a permissive environment for microbial proliferation
0301 basic medicine
Plague
Time Factors
Virulence
Yersinia pestis
Genetic Complementation Test
3. Good health
Mice, Inbred C57BL
Mice
03 medical and health sciences
Subcutaneous Tissue
Mutation
Animals
Respiratory Tract Infections
DOI:
10.1073/pnas.1112729109
Publication Date:
2012-02-02T20:44:11Z
AUTHORS (3)
ABSTRACT
Disease progression of primary pneumonic plague is biphasic, consisting of a preinflammatory and a proinflammatory phase. During the long preinflammatory phase, bacteria replicate to high levels, seemingly uninhibited by normal pulmonary defenses. In a coinfection model of pneumonic plague, it appears that
Yersinia pestis
quickly creates a localized, dominant anti-inflammatory state that allows for the survival and rapid growth of both itself and normally avirulent organisms.
Yersinia pseudotuberculosis
, the relatively recent progenitor of
Y. pestis
, shows no similar
trans
-complementation effect, which is unprecedented among other respiratory pathogens. We demonstrate that the effectors secreted by the Ysc type III secretion system are necessary but not sufficient to mediate this apparent immunosuppression. Even an unbiased negative selection screen using a vast pool of
Y. pestis
mutants revealed no selection against any known virulence genes, demonstrating the transformation of the lung from a highly restrictive to a generally permissive environment during the preinflammatory phase of pneumonic plague.
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