Yersiniabactin Is a Virulence Factor for Klebsiella pneumoniae during Pulmonary Infection

MS Lawlor, C O'connor, VL Miller - Infection and immunity, 2007 - journals.asm.org
MS Lawlor, C O'connor, VL Miller
Infection and immunity, 2007journals.asm.org
Iron acquisition systems are essential for the in vivo growth of bacterial pathogens. Despite
the epidemiological importance of Klebsiella pneumoniae, few experiments have examined
the importance of siderophores in the pathogenesis of this species. A previously reported
signature-tagged mutagenesis screen identified an attenuated strain that featured an
insertional disruption in ybtQ, which encodes a transporter for the siderophore
yersiniabactin. We used this finding as a starting point to evaluate the importance of …
Abstract
Iron acquisition systems are essential for the in vivo growth of bacterial pathogens. Despite the epidemiological importance of Klebsiella pneumoniae, few experiments have examined the importance of siderophores in the pathogenesis of this species. A previously reported signature-tagged mutagenesis screen identified an attenuated strain that featured an insertional disruption in ybtQ, which encodes a transporter for the siderophore yersiniabactin. We used this finding as a starting point to evaluate the importance of siderophores in the physiology and pathogenesis of K. pneumoniae. Isogenic strains carrying in-frame deletions in genes required for the synthesis of either enterobactin or yersiniabactin were constructed, and the growth of these mutants was examined both in vitro and in vivo using an intranasal infection model. The results suggest divergent functions for each siderophore in different environments, with enterobactin being more important for growth in vitro under iron limitation than in vivo and the reverse being true for the yersiniabactin locus. These observations represent the first examination of isogenic mutants in iron acquisition systems for K. pneumoniae and may indicate that the acquisition of nonenterobactin siderophores is an important step in the evolution of virulent enterobacterial strains.
American Society for Microbiology