Animals (Jan 2024)

The cAMP Receptor Protein (CRP) of <i>Vibrio mimicus</i> Regulates Its Bacterial Growth, Type II Secretion System, Flagellum Formation, Adhesion Genes, and Virulence

  • Ziqi Tian,
  • Fei Xiang,
  • Kun Peng,
  • Zhenyang Qin,
  • Yang Feng,
  • Bowen Huang,
  • Ping Ouyang,
  • Xiaoli Huang,
  • Defang Chen,
  • Weimin Lai,
  • Yi Geng

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ani14030437
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 3
p. 437

Abstract

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Vibrio mimicus is a serious pathogen in aquatic animals, resulting in significant economic losses. The cAMP receptor protein (CRP) often acts as a central regulator in highly pathogenic pathogens. V. mimicus SCCF01 is a highly pathogenic strain isolated from yellow catfish; the crp gene deletion strain (Δcrp) was constructed by natural transformation to determine whether this deletion affects the virulence phenotypes. Their potential molecular connections were revealed by qRT-PCR analysis. Our results showed that the absence of the crp gene resulted in bacterial and colony morphological changes alongside decreases in bacterial growth, hemolytic activity, biofilm formation, enzymatic activity, motility, and cell adhesion. A cell cytotoxicity assay and animal experiments confirmed that crp contributes to V. mimicus pathogenicity, as the LD50 of the Δcrp strain was 73.1-fold lower compared to the WT strain. Moreover, qRT-PCR analysis revealed the inhibition of type II secretion system genes, flagellum genes, adhesion genes, and metalloproteinase genes in the deletion strain. This resulted in the virulence phenotype differences described above. Together, these data demonstrate that the crp gene plays a core regulatory role in V. mimicus virulence and pathogenicity.

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