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Outer Membrane Proteins A (OmpA) and X (OmpX) Are Essential for Basolateral Invasion of Cronobacter sakazakii
Author(s) -
Kyumson Kim,
Kwang-Pyo Kim,
Jeongjoon Choi,
Jeong-A Lim,
Jung-Hyun Lee,
Sunyoung Hwang,
Sangryeol Ryu
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
applied and environmental microbiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.552
H-Index - 324
eISSN - 1070-6291
pISSN - 0099-2240
DOI - 10.1128/aem.02498-09
Subject(s) - cronobacter sakazakii , virulence , microbiology and biotechnology , mutant , bacterial outer membrane , biology , enterocyte , pathogen , enterobacteriaceae , bacteria , gene , escherichia coli , genetics , biochemistry , small intestine
Cronobacter sakazakii is an opportunistic pathogen that actively invades host eukaryotic cells. To identify invasion factors responsible for the intestinal translocation ofC. sakazakii , we constructed for the first time outer membrane protein X (OmpX) and A (OmpA) deletion mutants using the lambda Red recombination system. TheompX andompA deletion mutants showed significantly reduced invasion of human enterocyte-like epithelial Caco-2 and human intestinal epithelial INT-407 cells, and significantly fewer mutant cells were recovered from the livers and spleens of rat pups. Furthermore, compared with intact target cells, the invasion and initial association potentials of the mutants increased at a rate similar to that of the wild type in tight-junction-disrupted target cells, suggesting that OmpX and OmpA are involved in basolateral invasion byC. sakazakii . This is the first report ofC. sakazakii virulence determinants that are essential for basolateral invasion and that may be critical for the virulence ofC. sakazakii .

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