The PapG-adhesin at the tip of P-fimbriae provides Escherichia coli with a competitive edge in experimental bladder infections of cynomolgus monkeys.

J Winberg, R Möllby, J Bergström… - The Journal of …, 1995 - rupress.org
J Winberg, R Möllby, J Bergström, KA Karlsson, I Leonardsson, MA Milh, S Teneberg…
The Journal of experimental medicine, 1995rupress.org
Human urinary tract infection is an infectious disease that depends on a series of host-
microbial interactions. The bacteria first colonize the colon and then the periurethral/vaginal
areas; they ascend to and infect first the bladder and then the kidneys. Expression of
Escherichia coli P-fimbriae constitutes the strongest correlation to renal pathogenicity, but is
also related to first-time cystitis in children. The role of P-fimbriae in the preceding steps in
the infectious process is unknown. To examine this, we constructed, from a P-fimbriated E …
Human urinary tract infection is an infectious disease that depends on a series of host-microbial interactions. The bacteria first colonize the colon and then the periurethral/vaginal areas; they ascend to and infect first the bladder and then the kidneys. Expression of Escherichia coli P-fimbriae constitutes the strongest correlation to renal pathogenicity, but is also related to first-time cystitis in children. The role of P-fimbriae in the preceding steps in the infectious process is unknown. To examine this, we constructed, from a P-fimbriated E. coli strain with a class II G-adhesin preferentially binding to globoside, one isogenic mutant lacking the G-adhesin and another isogenic mutant in which we replaced the papG class II allele with a class III adhesin preferentially binding to the Forssman antigen. We report here the comparison of the adhesin knockout mutant (DS17-8) and the class-switch mutant (DS17-1) with the wild-type (DS17) for in vivo colonization of the gut, vagina, and bladder of cynomolgus monkeys. It was recently shown that the class II tip G-adhesin is a prerequisite for acute pyelonephritis to occur in the monkey model in the absence of other kidney-specific adhesins or obstruction of the urinary flow. Here we show that it is not required for bladder infection but gives a competitive advantage in mixed infections. In the vagina and colon, the G-adhesin gives no competitive advantage.
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