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1.
Environ Microbiol ; 19(10): 4326-4348, 2017 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28892295

ABSTRACT

Campylobacter jejuni, the most frequent cause of food-borne bacterial gastroenteritis worldwide, is a microaerophile that has to survive high environmental oxygen tensions, adapt to oxygen limitation in the intestine and resist host oxidative attack. Here, oxygen-dependent changes in C. jejuni physiology were studied at constant growth rate using carbon (serine)-limited continuous chemostat cultures. We show that a perceived aerobiosis scale can be calibrated by the acetate excretion flux, which becomes zero when metabolism is fully aerobic (100% aerobiosis). Transcriptome changes in a downshift experiment from 150% to 40% aerobiosis revealed many novel oxygen-regulated genes and highlighted re-modelling of the electron transport chains. A label-free proteomic analysis showed that at 40% aerobiosis, many proteins involved in host colonisation (e.g., PorA, CadF, FlpA, CjkT) became more abundant. PorA abundance increased steeply below 100% aerobiosis. In contrast, several citric-acid cycle enzymes, the peptide transporter CstA, PEB1 aspartate/glutamate transporter, LutABC lactate dehydrogenase and PutA proline dehydrogenase became more abundant with increasing aerobiosis. We also observed a co-ordinated response of oxidative stress protection enzymes and Fe-S cluster biogenesis proteins above 100% aerobiosis. Our approaches reveal key virulence factors that respond to restricted oxygen availability and specific transporters and catabolic pathways activated with increasing aerobiosis.


Subject(s)
Aerobiosis/physiology , Campylobacter jejuni/metabolism , Campylobacter jejuni/pathogenicity , Oxidative Stress/physiology , Oxygen/metabolism , Campylobacter Infections/microbiology , Campylobacter jejuni/genetics , Humans , Oxidation-Reduction , Proteome/metabolism , Proteomics , Transcriptome/genetics , Virulence Factors/genetics , Virulence Factors/metabolism
2.
Microbiology (Reading) ; 155(Pt 1): 80-94, 2009 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19118349

ABSTRACT

Campylobacter jejuni is a prevalent cause of food-borne diarrhoeal illness in humans. Understanding of the physiological and metabolic capabilities of the organism is limited. We report a detailed analysis of the C. jejuni growth cycle in batch culture. Combined transcriptomic, phenotypic and metabolic analysis demonstrates a highly dynamic 'stationary phase', characterized by a peak in motility, numerous gene expression changes and substrate switching, despite transcript changes that indicate a metabolic downshift upon the onset of stationary phase. Video tracking of bacterial motility identifies peak activity during stationary phase. Amino acid analysis of culture supernatants shows a preferential order of amino acid utilization. Proton NMR (1H-NMR) highlights an acetate switch mechanism whereby bacteria change from acetate excretion to acetate uptake, most probably in response to depletion of other substrates. Acetate production requires pta (Cj0688) and ackA (Cj0689), although the acs homologue (Cj1537c) is not required. Insertion mutants in Cj0688 and Cj0689 maintain viability less well during the stationary and decline phases of the growth cycle than wild-type C. jejuni, suggesting that these genes, and the acetate pathway, are important for survival.


Subject(s)
Acetates/metabolism , Bacterial Proteins/metabolism , Campylobacter jejuni/growth & development , Campylobacter jejuni/physiology , Gene Expression Profiling , Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial , Bacterial Proteins/genetics , Campylobacter jejuni/genetics , Campylobacter jejuni/metabolism , Colony Count, Microbial , Culture Media , Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy , Microscopy, Phase-Contrast , Microscopy, Video , Movement , Oligonucleotide Array Sequence Analysis/methods , Phenotype , Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction
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