PLoS ONE (Jan 2013)

Pathoadaptive mutations in Salmonella enterica isolated after serial passage in mice.

  • Sanna Koskiniemi,
  • Henry S Gibbons,
  • Linus Sandegren,
  • Naeem Anwar,
  • Gary Ouellette,
  • Stacey Broomall,
  • Mark Karavis,
  • Paul McGregor,
  • Alvin Liem,
  • Ed Fochler,
  • Lauren McNew,
  • Carolyn Nicole Rosenzweig,
  • Mikael Rhen,
  • Evan W Skowronski,
  • Dan I Andersson

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0070147
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 7
p. e70147

Abstract

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How pathogenic bacteria adapt and evolve in the complex and variable environment of the host remains a largely unresolved question. Here we have used whole genome sequencing of Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium LT2 populations serially passaged in mice to identify mutations that adapt bacteria to systemic growth in mice. We found unique pathoadaptive mutations in two global regulators, phoQ and stpA, which increase the competitive indexes of the bacteria 3- to 5-fold. Also, all mouse-adapted lineages had changed the orientation of the hin invertable element, resulting in production of a FliC type of flagellum. Competition experiments in mice with locked flagellum mutants showed that strains expressing the FliC type of flagellum had a 5-fold increase in competitive index as compared to those expressing FljB type flagellum. Combination of the flagellum cassette inversion with the stpA mutation increased competitive indexes up to 20-fold. These experiments show that Salmonella can rapidly adapt to a mouse environment by acquiring a few mutations of moderate individual effect that when combined confer substantial increases in growth.