Preferential Use of Central Metabolism In Vivo Reveals a Nutritional Basis for Polymicrobial Infection

0301 basic medicine QH301-705.5 Coinfection RC581-607 Transaldolase 3. Good health Mice 03 medical and health sciences Urinary Tract Infections Escherichia coli Mice, Inbred CBA Animals Humans Female Nutritional Physiological Phenomena Immunologic diseases. Allergy Biology (General) Proteus Infections Glycolysis Proteus mirabilis Escherichia coli Infections Research Article
DOI: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1004601 Publication Date: 2015-01-08T19:26:09Z
ABSTRACT
The human genitourinary tract is a common anatomical niche for polymicrobial infection and a leading site for the development of bacteremia and sepsis. Most uncomplicated, community-acquired urinary tract infections (UTI) are caused by Escherichia coli, while another bacterium, Proteus mirabilis, is more often associated with complicated UTI. Here, we report that uropathogenic E. coli and P. mirabilis have divergent requirements for specific central pathways in vivo despite colonizing and occupying the same host environment. Using mutants of specific central metabolism enzymes, we determined glycolysis mutants lacking pgi, tpiA, pfkA, or pykA all have fitness defects in vivo for P. mirabilis but do not affect colonization of E. coli during UTI. Similarly, the oxidative pentose phosphate pathway is required only for P. mirabilis in vivo. In contrast, gluconeogenesis is required only for E. coli fitness in vivo. The remarkable difference in central pathway utilization between E. coli and P. mirabilis during experimental UTI was also observed for TCA cycle mutants in sdhB, fumC, and frdA. The distinct in vivo requirements between these pathogens suggest E. coli and P. mirabilis are not direct competitors within host urinary tract nutritional niche. In support of this, we found that co-infection with E. coli and P. mirabilis wild-type strains enhanced bacterial colonization and persistence of both pathogens during UTI. Our results reveal that complementary utilization of central carbon metabolism facilitates polymicrobial disease and suggests microbial activity in vivo alters the host urinary tract nutritional niche.
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