학술논문

Type IV Pili, transient bacterial aggregates, and virulence of enteropathogenic escherichia coli
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
Science. June 26, 1998, Vol. 280 Issue 5372, p2114, 5 p.
Subject
Escherichia coli -- Research
Science and technology
Research
Language
English
ISSN
0036-8075
Abstract
Type IV bundle-forming pili of enteropathogenic Escherichia coli are required for the localized adherence and autoaggregation phenotypes. Whether these pili are also required for virulence was tested in volunteers by inactivating bfpA or bfpT (perA) encoding, respectively, the pilus subunit and the bfp operon transcriptional activator. Both mutants caused significantly less diarrhea. Mutation of the bfpF nucleotide-binding domain caused increased piliation, enhanced localized adherence, and abolished the twitching motility--dispersal phase of the autoaggregation phenotype. The bfpF mutant colonized the human intestine but was about 200-fold less virulent. Thus, BfpF is required for dispersal from the bacterial aggregate and for full virulence.
The type IV family of bacterial pili, produced by several human and animal pathogens, is thought to participate in the infectious process by promoting bacterial adherence to host cells (1). [...]