The role of bcsE gene in the pathogenicity of Salmonella

Date

2021-07-19

Authors

Özdemir, Caner
Akçelik, N.
Özdemir, F. N.
Evcili, İrem
Kahraman, Tamer
Gürsel, İhsan
Akçelik, M.

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Source Title

Pathogens and Disease

Print ISSN

Electronic ISSN

2049-632X

Publisher

Oxford University Press

Volume

79

Issue

6

Pages

1 - 11

Language

English

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Volume Title

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Abstract

The effects of the bcsE gene and BcsE protein on bacterial physiology and pathogenicity in SalmonellaTyphimurium and Salmonella Group C1 were investigated. It was observed that biofilm and pellicle formation did not occur in the bcsE gene mutants of wild-type strains. Besides, the ‘rdar’ (red, dry, rough) biofilm morphotype in wild-type strains changed significantly in the mutants. In terms of the bcsE gene, the swimming and swarming motility in mutant strains showed a dramatic increase compared to the wild-type strains. The Salmonella bcsE gene was cloned into Escherichia coli BL21, and the his-tagged protein produced in this strain was purified to obtain polyclonal antibodies in BALB/c mice. The antibodies were showed labeled antigen specificity to the BscE protein. As a result of immunization and systemic persistence tests carried out with BALB/c mice, BscE protein was determined to trigger high levels of humoral and cellular responses (Th1 cytokine production, IgG2a/IgG1 > 1). Systemic persistence in the liver and spleen samples decreased by 99.99% and 100% in the bcsE mutant strains. Finally, invasion abilities on HT-29 epithelial cells of wild-type strains were utterly disappeared in their bcsE gene mutant strains.

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Keywords

Salmonella, BcsE, Biofilm, Invasion, Persistence, Pathogenicity

Citation