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Requirement for cobalamin by Salmonella enterica serovars Typhimurium, Pullorum, Gallinarum and Enteritidis during infection in chickens

Abstract

Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium synthesizes cobalamin (vitamin B12) only during anaerobiosis. Two percent of the S. Typhimurium genome is devoted to the synthesis and uptake of vitamin B12 and to B12-dependent reactions. To understand the requirement for cobalamin synthesis better, we constructed mutants of Salmonella serovars Enteritidis and Pullorum that are double-defective in cobalamin biosynthesis (ΔcobSΔcbiA). We compared the virulence of these mutants to that of their respective wild type strains and found no impairment in their ability to cause disease in chickens. We then assessed B12 production in these mutants and their respective wild type strains, as well as in S. Typhimurium ΔcobSΔcbiA, Salmonella Gallinarum ΔcobSΔcbiA, and their respective wild type strains. None of the mutants was able to produce detectable B12. B12 was detectable in S. Enteritidis, S. Pullorum and S. Typhimurium wild type strains but not in S. Gallinarum. In conclusion, the production of vitamin B12 in vitro differed across the tested Salmonella serotypes and the deletion of the cbiA and cobS genes resulted in different levels of alteration in the host parasite interaction according to Salmonella serotype tested.

Salmonella; cobalamin; gene deletion; chickens


VETERINARY MICROBIOLOGY

Requirement for cobalamin by Salmonella enterica serovars Typhimurium, Pullorum, Gallinarum and Enteritidis during infection in chickens

Jacqueline Boldrin de PaivaI; Rafael Antonio Casarin Penha FilhoI; Angelo Berchieri JuniorI,* * Corresponding Author. Mailing address: Department of Veterinary Pathology, School of Agronomic and Veterinary Sciences, UNESP - São Paulo State University, 14884-900, Jaboticabal, SP, Brazil..; E-mail: berchier@fcav.unesp.br ; Manoel Victor Franco LemosII

IDepartamento de Patologia Veterinária, Faculdade de Ciências Agrárias e Veterinárias, Universidade Estadual Paulista, Jaboticabal, SP, Brasil

IIDepartamento de Biologia, Faculdade de Ciências Agrárias e Veterinárias, Universidade Estadual Paulista, Jaboticabal, SP, Brasil

ABSTRACT

Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium synthesizes cobalamin (vitamin B12) only during anaerobiosis. Two percent of the S. Typhimurium genome is devoted to the synthesis and uptake of vitamin B12 and to B12-dependent reactions. To understand the requirement for cobalamin synthesis better, we constructed mutants of Salmonella serovars Enteritidis and Pullorum that are double-defective in cobalamin biosynthesis (ΔcobSΔcbiA). We compared the virulence of these mutants to that of their respective wild type strains and found no impairment in their ability to cause disease in chickens. We then assessed B12 production in these mutants and their respective wild type strains, as well as in S. Typhimurium ΔcobSΔcbiA, Salmonella Gallinarum ΔcobSΔcbiA, and their respective wild type strains. None of the mutants was able to produce detectable B12. B12 was detectable in S. Enteritidis, S. Pullorum and S. Typhimurium wild type strains but not in S. Gallinarum. In conclusion, the production of vitamin B12 in vitro differed across the tested Salmonella serotypes and the deletion of the cbiA and cobS genes resulted in different levels of alteration in the host parasite interaction according to Salmonella serotype tested.

Key words: Salmonella, cobalamin, gene deletion, chickens.

INTRODUCTION

Cobalamin (vitamin B12) is a large, evolutionarily conserved cofactor and is one of the most structurally complex biomolecules described (12, 39, 40). Vitamin B12 is derived from uroporphyrinogen III (Uro III), which is a common precursor in the synthesis of heme, siroheme, cobnamides, and chlorophylls, the latter playing a functional role functioning in photosynthetic organisms.

Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium synthesizes cobalamin de novo during anaerobiosis (20), and researchers have speculated that this is carried out by all Salmonella isolates (24, 32). Nearly 1% of the S. Typhimurium genome is devoted to the synthesis and uptake of cobalamin. An additional 1% is involved in metabolic pathways that require cobalamin (36). Only four vitamin B12-dependent reactions are known to exist in Salmonella Typhimurium. First, B12 is required by one methyltransferase, the product of the gene metH, which catalyzes the methylation of homocysteine to form methionine (31). Second, B12 is required for the cleavage of ethanolamine into acetaldehyde and ammonia, providing both a carbon and a nitrogen source (34, 35). Third, B12 is involved in the formation of the nonessential hyper-modified Q base found in the anti-codon of tRNAAsp,Asn,His,Tyr (15). Finally, the main use of B12 appears to be as a cofactor for propanediol dehydratase, the first enzyme in the propanediol degradation. This finding is based on evidence showing that the cob operon, which encodes the B12 biosynthetic genes, is induced in response to propanediol and is co-regulated with the pdu operon, which encodes genes that are required for propanediol degradation. This regulatory pattern suggests that propanediol might be a useful carbon and energy source under anaerobic conditions (18, 6). Interestingly, these B12-dependent reactions are not necessary for the laboratory cultivation of Salmonella in either aerobic or anaerobic conditions. This large genetic investment in the production and utilization of vitamin B12 suggests that B12-dependent metabolism might be important during Salmonella infection. Therefore, vitamin B12 biosynthesis might be important under specific conditions, such as during Salmonella growth within its animal hosts. Furthermore, the selective pressure to maintain B12 synthesis might vary with the lifestyle of the organism, as well as in the host-parasite relationship (36).

The genus Salmonella can be divided in two groups based on bacterial pathogenesis and infection biology. The first group includes the majority of the recognized serovars and infects a broad range of host species. Bacteria from this group colonize the gastrointestinal tracts of poultry, resulting in no clinical symptoms in chickens but causing gastroenteritis in humans. The bacteria contaminate the infected animal carcasses during processing, thereby accessing the human food chain and leading to enteric fever, gastroenteritis, bacteremia and systemic infection. This group of bacteria includes the Salmonella enterica serovar Enteritidis in poultry. The second group includes a few serovars that produce systemic typhoid-like diseases in healthy, immunologically mature adult animals and derive from a limited range of host species. This second group includes the Salmonella enterica serovars Pullorum and Gallinarum, which are host-specific for poultry. Bacterial multiplication mainly takes place in the cells of the reticulo-endothelial system (10). Although infection is typically introduced via the fecal-oral route, these Salmonella strains do not colonize the digestive tract. Salmonella Typhimurium is one of the leading causes of food poisoning in both humans and mice.

We recently demonstrated that the double mutant S. Gallinarum ΔcobSΔcbiA is avirulent in chickens and that the mortality of chickens infected by S. Typhimurium ΔcobSΔcbiA is reduced to half that induced by the wild type strain (30,41).

In the present work, S. Enteritidis and S. Pullorum ΔcobSΔcbiA mutants were generated. Their virulence was compared to the virulence of their respective wild type strains, and assays to detect cobalamin production in the wild type and mutant strains were performed. The S. Typhimurium ΔcobSΔcbiA and S. Gallinarum ΔcobSΔcbiA strains were included in the latter assays.

MATERIALS AND METHODS

Bacterial strains and culture media

The designation and source of each bacterial strain used in this study are provided in Table 1. Cultures for transductions and inoculums were grown in 10 mL of Luria Bertani broth (LB) (Invitrogen Nº 12780-052) and incubated for 24 hours at 37ºC in a shaking incubator (100 rpm). The aerobic broth cultures contained approximately 5.0x108 CFU/mL. The selection of mutants following transduction was performed on Luria Bertani agar (Lennox L 22700-025 Invitrogen) supplemented with nalidixic acid (25 μg/mL), kanamycin (30 μg/mL), or spectynomicin (50 µg/mL). Cultures for the detection of the B12 that was produced by the S. Enteritidis and S. Typhimurium strains were prepared in 10 mL of M9 glucose minimal medium supplemented with CoC2.6H2O (1.2 mg/L) and covered with a layer of Vaseline. To detect B12 that was produced by the S. Gallinarum and S. Pullorum strains, the M9 minimal medium was supplemented with vitamin-free casaminoacid (2%) and vitamin B1. This medium was then boiled to eliminate any remaining oxygen. Anaerobic cultures were incubated at 37ºC for 24 hours.

Mutant construction

Double ΔcobSΔcbiA mutants for S. Enteritidis and S. Pullorum were constructed from single S. Gallinarum ΔcobSSpecr and S. Gallinarum ΔcbiAKanr mutants (30). Gene transference was carried out using the bacteriophage P22 followed by transduction according to standard protocols (37).

Birds

Virulence was assessed by oral inoculation of one-day-old Hy-line® commercial layers with 0.1 mL of culture containing 108 CFU/mL of double mutant or wild type strains. We used the variety of Hy-line® Isa Brown layers for experiments conducted with Salmonella Pullorum and both Hy-line® varieties W36 and Isa Brown for the Salmonella Enteritidis assays. These birds were chosen because they are susceptible to Pullorum diseases and to Salmonella Enteritidis infection (3, 4, 13).

Virulence assays

Experiment 1. Assessment of mortality: This experiment was performed only with S. Pullorum because the adopted S. Enteritidis strain does not cause mortality (4). Each group contained 20 birds, and mortality was recorded over a period of 28 days. Data were assessed using the Chi-square test (p < 0.05).

Experiment 2. Fecal excretion: This assay was performed only with Salmonella Enteritidis because this serovar extensively colonizes the gastrointestinal tract. The assay was carried out as previously described with some modifications (1). The challenge was performed as described in Experiment 1. Cloacal swabs were placed in selenite broth (CM0395 and LP0121A; Oxoid) containing 40 mg/mL of novobiocin (SN/ Nov) and were directly plated onto Brilliant Green Agar (BGA) (CM0263; Oxoid) containing 100 mg/mL of nalidixic acid and 0.04% novobiocin (BGA Nal/Nov). The cultures were incubated at 37ºC for 24 hours. In the absence of growth, the appropriate enriched swab culture was streaked out onto fresh plates of BGA Nal/Nov.

Experiment 3. Assessment of systemic infection: The bacteriological analysis was performed as previously described with some modifications (1). At 2, 5, 7, 14, 21, and 28 days post-inoculation (dpi), samples from the spleen, liver, and cecal content were collected and diluted (1:10) in phosphate-buffered saline, pH 7.4 (PBS). The organ samples were macerated using a mortar and pestle, and the cecal content was homogenized. A viable count for the number of mutant and wild type strains in the samples was estimated by plating aliquots of decimal dilutions onto BGA Nal/Nov and then incubating the cultures overnight at 37ºC. In the absence of growth on the BGANal/Nov, an equal volume of double-concentrated SN/Nov was added to the first dilution of the samples that was incubated at 37ºC overnight and plated on BGANal/Nov. The plates were incubated at 37ºC overnight. Data for the viable counts were transformed logarithmically (Log10), and their variance was analyzed (ANOVA). For media comparison Tuckey's test was used (p < 0.05).

Vitamin B12. Detection and quantification

Experiment 1. B12 MacConkey indicator medium: Anaerobic M9 cultures were plated on MacConkey indicator plates. MacConkey agar base supplemented with 1% 1,2-Propanediol (1,2-Pd) and 1 mg/L CoCl2.6H2O uses bile salts and the pH indicator neutral red to differentiate between strains that are capable of degrading 1,2-Pd to propionate. The bile salts are precipitated when propionic acid is produced, and this phenomenon is followed by the absorption of the neutral red indicator, imparting red color to the colonies. Strains that cannot degrade 1,2-Pd into propionic acid remain uncolored, and these strains were scored as white. Plates were incubated at 37ºC for 24 hours.

Experiment 2. Automated immunoassay for cobalamin production: The automated immunoassay Immulite 1000 (Siemens®) was used to quantify vitamin B12. Salmonella strains were inoculated into M9 minimal medium containing Vaseline and were cultivated three times in the same medium. Cells grown in 50 mL of defined medium and incubated at 37ºC for 24 hours were centrifuged at 4000 rpm for 20 minutes. The pellets were washed twice with 0.2 M potassium phosphate buffer (pH 5.5) and then resuspended in the same buffer containing 0.1% KCN. The suspension was autoclaved for 15 minutes at 121ºC. The supernatant, which contained the extracted vitamin B12, was filtered through a 0.2-µm Millipore filter (33).

RESULTS

Virulence assays

Experiment 1. Mortality rates: No difference was observed between mortality rates for birds that were challenged with S. Pullorum ΔcobSΔcbiA and S. Pullorum Nalr (p>0.05; data not showed).

Experiment 2. Fecal excretion: Figure 1 shows the number of S. Enteritidis-positive cloacal swabs. Intestinal colonization by the S. Enteritidis ΔcobSΔcbiA strains was increased in both Hy-line® varieties W36 and Isa Brown layers compared to the S. Enteritidis Nalr strain (p<0.05).


Experiment 3. Assessment of systemic infection: No difference was observed between viable counts of S. Enteritidis ΔcobSΔcbiA and S. Enteritidis Nalr in the livers and spleens of the two varieties Hy-line® W36 and Isa Brown that were used in this experiment (p > 0.05). Similar to the data obtained for fecal excretion, higher counts of S. Enteritidis ΔcobSΔcbiA, as compared to S. Enteritidis Nalr, were observed in the cecal contents of both varieties of layers that were analyzed. However, at 5 and 14 dpi, a difference was detected in the brown variety of the layer (p > 0.05) (Figure 2).


Figure 3 shows the results obtained for infection with S. Pullorum. Similar counts of S. Pullorum ΔcobSΔcbiA and S. Pullorum Nalr were observed in the liver, spleen, and cecal contents (p>0.05).


Vitamin B12. Detection and quantification: S. Pullorum ΔcobSΔcbiA, S. Enteritidis ΔcobSΔcbiA, and S. Typhimurium ΔcobSΔcbiA strains do not synthesize cobalamin because the double mutation abrogates the cobalamin synthetic pathway. These strains produced uncolored colonies on MacConkey agar due to their inability to degrade propanediol without cobalamin, and their B12 levels were below the inferior limit of detection in the Immulite assay. S. Pullorum Nalr, S. Enteritidis Nalr and S. Typhimurium Nalr were positive for cobalamin production in both the MacConkey agar and the Immulite assays (Table 2). S. Gallinarum ΔcobSΔcbiA and S. Gallinarum Nalr did not synthesize cobalamin in either of the in vitro tests (Table 2).

DISCUSSION

The cobalamin biosynthetic genes have been characterized in Salmonella Typhimurium. Most genes are located in a large 20-gene cluster 17 genes in cbi A-P, and 3 genes cob UST. Within this cluster, genes that encode the enzymes that are required for the three parts of the cobalamin synthesis pathway are grouped together. Mutations in these genes confer three phenotypes: CobI- (cbi genes), CobIII- (cobU and cobS genes) and CobII - (cobT gene) (19, 11). CobIII- mutants are unable to synthesize cobalamin, even if all of the precursor substrates are provided. In S. Typhimurium, the CbiA enzyme catalyzes the first step of adenosylcobnamide synthesis, and the CobS enzyme catalyzes the last step of adenosylcobnamide synthesis (14, 27). Thus, Salmonella ΔcobSΔcbiA strains are unable to synthesize cobalamin. This phenotype was verified in our analysis of B12 production using either the MacConkey 1,2-Pd agar or the Immulite assays.

Salmonella Typhimurium synthesizes cobalamin de novo under anaerobic conditions (20). Many researchers have suggested that all isolates of Salmonella possess this ability (36, 32). Using two applied assays, we have demonstrated in the present study that Salmonella Gallinarum does not synthesize cobalamin under in vitro anaerobic conditions. However, S. Gallinarum appears to require this cofactor during infection in chickens. S. Gallinarum ΔcobSΔcbiA caused no mortality, but the wild type strain killed 80% of the chickens (30). Therefore, induction of the cob operon seems to be active only during in vivo conditions, such as during an infection. Alternatively, cob genes are never induced, but their products directly target virulence genes. This hypothesis is supported by genome sequencing data for Salmonella Gallinarum 287/91, demonstrating a loss of function of genes that are related to cobalamin biosynthesis (pocR, cobD, cbiD, cbiC, cbiO,) and propanediol utilization by Salmonella Gallinarum (pduG and pduO) as well as, independently, by S. Typhi (42).

The known cobalamin-dependent reactions in S. Typhimurium do not clearly justify this organism's large genetic investment in cobalamin biosynthesis and transport. The enzyme methionine synthetase is redundant, and the enzyme queosine synthetase is apparently nonessential. Propanediol utilization appears to be the primary use for cobalamin in S. Typhimurium (18). Propanediol is a useful and readily available carbon and energy source in the gastrointestinal tract of birds and mammals; because it is produced during the anaerobic catabolism of two common pentose sugars, rhamnose and fucose, and it is found in glycoconjugates present in the intestinal epithelium (29). In the presence of oxygen, propanediol serves as the sole carbon and energy source, but cobalamin is synthesized de novo under anaerobic growth conditions (18). Tetrationate is able to act as an alternative electrons acceptor, and its availability for S. Typhimurium in the host was demonstrated, recently (46). Tetrationate is product of gut inflammation, trigger by Salmonella, and the luminal sulphur compounds, the ability to use this new electron acceptor produce a growth advantage for S. Typhimurium over the competing luminal microbiota (46). Also, the ability to degrade 1,2-Pd confers a selective advantage in anaerobic niches, such as the intestinal tract of host animals, and within macrophages (26, 29). Evidence suggests that 1,2-Pd plays a role in Salmonella pathogenesis. In vivo expression technology (IVET) indicates that 1,2-Pd degradation is important for S. Typhimurium growth in host tissues, and competitive index studies in mice indicate that pdu but not cob confers a virulence defect in S. Typhimurium (9, 16). The pdu locus is positioned adjacent to the cob operon, and both operons are controlled globally by the same systems in both aerobic and anaerobic conditions. Furthermore, both operons are induced by propanediol (5, 9). Deficiencies in invasion by cob-cbi-pdu cluster-mutated S. Typhimurium have been observed in mice, demonstrating that the cob-cbi-pdu gene cluster increases the intracellular fitness of Salmonella (23). The ΔcobSΔcbiA deletion in S. Typhimurium partially reduces the pathogenicity of the bacteria in broiler chickens

(41).

As previously observed for S. Typhimurium that contain defective genes related to vitamin B12 biosynthesis (38, 5), the ΔcobSΔcbiA S. Enteritidis and ΔcobSΔcbiA S. Pullorum mutants exhibited normal growth under both aerobic and anaerobic conditions. Both S. Enteritidis and S. Pullorum maintained the ability to colonize the avian intestinal tract and cause systemic infection. In addition, fecal excretion and cecal colonization by S. Enteritidis ΔcobSΔcbiA was higher than that induced by the wild type S. Enteritidis strain (p < 0.05). S. Pullorum and S. Gallinarum are avian host-specific pathogens, whereas S. Enteritidis has a broad range of hosts. Although these three serovars belong to the same monophyletic group, they differ in their pathogenicity characteristics (25). The primary importance of cobalamin biosynthesis for these three serovars remains unclear and might be variable. The survival of S. Enteritidis in chickens does not appear to require cobalamin. Although they are responsible for causing distinct diseases, S. Pullorum and S. Gallinarum have been historically considered to be very similar based on their relationship with birds and their phenotypic behavior. They are also easily distinguished from S. Enteritidis (2). However, in terms of vitamin B12 requirement, S. Enteritidis and S. Pullorum appear to be more similar to each other and to differ from S. Gallinarum. The identification of the genetic and environmental factors that regulate specific in vivo-induced (ivi) genes expression, as well as the host site(s) in which these genes are expressed, can provide clues about the intracellular environment and possible functions for ivi genes in these specific host tissues. The functions of some of these genes might change depending on the context of the animal, organ, cell type, or sub-cellular compartment that the organism inhabits. In the present study, such clues proved to be useful for understanding S. Gallinarum but not the other Salmonella serotypes (16). Signals present specifically in pig tonsils induce the cob operon of S. Typhimurium, either as a requirement for survival in the tonsil or as a prelude to migration into the intestinal tract (17).

Several comparative studies between S. Gallinarum and other Salmonella serotypes have demonstrated differences in the cellular mechanisms that might be responsible for the specificity and adaptability of S. Gallinarum to the avian host (43, 45, 22, 44, 8). For example, glycogen has a complex role in survival and, therefore, in prolonging the infectivity of broad-host-range Salmonella outside of the host. It also plays a minor role in Salmonella virulence and colonization (28). S. Gallinarum and S. Pullorum do not accumulate glycogen under test conditions (21). The loss of glycogen synthesis is an example of pseudogene accumulation by host-restricted serovars and is indicative of functions that are no longer required due to niche specialization. Host adaptation is often associated with extensive gene deletion (7) and complex nutritional requirements, as observed in other host-adapted serovars, such as S. Typhi.

Salmonella enterica is a bacterial species that includes examples of both promiscuous and host-adapted pathotypes. There is a consensus among researchers that the selection pressure to maintain B12 synthesis varies with the lifestyle of the organism. Escherichia coli does not maintain a complete cob operon and seems to fill a niche that does not require complete de novo cobalamin synthesis. Conversely, the ability of S. Enteritidis and S. Typhimurium to synthesize B12 must be strongly selected for as these organisms maintain the full operon. If we identify the precise moment at which the cob operon is induced (if at all) in S. Enteritidis, S. Typhimurium, S. Gallinarum, and S. Pullorum, we might develop a better understanding of its importance for colonization, multiplication, survival in macrophages, and immune evasion.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

This work was supported by Fapesp.

We thank Dr. James Warren and Dr. Evelyne Raux Deery from the University of Kent, UK, both for the donation of MacConkey agar for B12 detection and for technical support.

We also thank Dr. Fernando Sesma from Tucuman, Argentina for his dedication and patience while he taught us.

Submitted: June 07, 2010; Returned to authors for corrections: January 26, 2011; Approved: May 16, 2011.

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  • *
    Corresponding Author. Mailing address: Department of Veterinary Pathology, School of Agronomic and Veterinary Sciences, UNESP - São Paulo State University, 14884-900, Jaboticabal, SP, Brazil..; E-mail:
  • Publication Dates

    • Publication in this collection
      13 Feb 2012
    • Date of issue
      Dec 2011

    History

    • Reviewed
      26 Jan 2011
    • Received
      07 June 2010
    • Accepted
      16 May 2011
    Sociedade Brasileira de Microbiologia USP - ICB III - Dep. de Microbiologia, Sociedade Brasileira de Microbiologia, Av. Prof. Lineu Prestes, 2415, Cidade Universitária, 05508-900 São Paulo, SP - Brasil, Ramal USP 7979, Tel. / Fax: (55 11) 3813-9647 ou 3037-7095 - São Paulo - SP - Brazil
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