Scientific Reports (Jul 2024)

Infection of mice by the enteroaggregative E. coli strain 042 and two mutant derivatives overexpressing virulence factors: impact on disease markers, gut microbiota and concentration of SCFAs in feces

  • M. Bernabeu,
  • A. Prieto,
  • D. Salguero,
  • L. Miró,
  • R. Cabrera-Rubio,
  • M. C. Collado,
  • M. Hüttener,
  • A. Pérez-Bosque,
  • A. Juárez

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-67731-1
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 13

Abstract

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Abstract Several pathogenic Escherichia coli strains cause diarrhea. Enteroaggregative E. coli (EAEC) strains are one of the diarrheagenic pathotypes. EAEC cells form a “stacked-brick” arrangement over the intestinal epithelial cells. EAEC isolates express, among other virulence determinants, the AggR transcriptional activator and the aggregative adherence fimbriae (AAF). Overexpression of the aggR gene results in increased expression of virulence factors such as the aff genes, as well as several genes involved in specific metabolic pathways such as fatty acid degradation (fad) and arginine degradation (ast). To support the hypothesis that induction of the expression of some of these pathways may play a role in EAEC virulence, in this study we used a murine infection model to evaluate the impact of the expression of these pathways on infection parameters. Mice infected with a mutant derivative of the EAEC strain 042, characterized by overexpression of the aggR gene, showed increased disease symptoms compared to those exhibited by mice infected with the wild type (wt) strain 042. Several of these symptoms were not increased when the infecting mutant, which overexpressed aggR, lacked the fad and ast pathways. Therefore, our results support the hypothesis that different metabolic pathways contribute to EAEC virulence.

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