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Microbiology 152 (2006), 153-160; DOI  10.1099/mic.0.28281-0
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Microbiology 152 (2006), 153-160; DOI  10.1099/mic.0.28281-0
© 2006 Society for General Microbiology

PhoU enhances the ability of extraintestinal pathogenic Escherichia coli strain CFT073 to colonize the murine urinary tract

Eric L. Buckles1, Xiaolin Wang1, C. Virginia Lockatell1, David E. Johnson1,2 and Michael S. Donnenberg1

1 Division of Infectious Diseases, Department of Medicine, University of Maryland School of Medicine, HSF II, 20 Penn Street, Baltimore, MD 21201, USA
2 Department of Veterans Affairs, Baltimore, MD 21201, USA

Correspondence
Michael S. Donnenberg
mdonnenb{at}umaryland.edu

The phoU gene is the last cistron in the pstSCAB–phoU operon and functions as a negative regulator of the Pho regulon. The authors previously identified a phoU mutant of extraintestinal pathogenic Escherichia coli strain CFT073 and demonstrated that this mutant was attenuated for survival in the murine model of ascending urinary tract infection. It is hypothesized that the PhoU protein might serve as a urovirulence factor by indirectly affecting the expression of virulence-related genes. In this study, the phoU mutant was further characterized and PhoU was confirmed as a virulence factor. Western blot analysis demonstrated that insertion of the transposon in the phoU gene disrupted the expression of PhoU. The phoU mutant had derepressed alkaline phosphatase activity under phosphate-excess and -limiting conditions. In single-challenge murine ascending urinary tract infection experiments, quantitative cultures of urine, bladder and kidney revealed no significant differences between the phoU mutant strain and the wild-type strain CFT073. However, in competitive colonization experiments, the phoU mutant strain was significantly out-competed by the wild-type strain in the kidneys and urine and recovered in lower amount in the bladder. Complementation of the phoU mutant with a plasmid containing the wild-type phoU gene restored the expression of PhoU and alkaline phosphate activity to wild-type levels and no significant difference in colonization was observed between the phoU mutant containing the complementing plasmid and wild-type in competitive colonization experiments. In human urine, the phoU mutant and wild-type grew comparably when inoculated independently, indicating that the attenuation observed was not due to a general growth defect. However, as observed in vivo, the wild-type out-competed the phoU mutant in competition growth experiments in human urine. These data indicate that PhoU contributes to efficient colonization of the murine urinary tract and add PhoU to a short list of confirmed urovirulence factors.


Abbreviations: ExPEC, extraintestinal pathogenic E. coli; STM, signature-tagged mutagenesis; UPEC, uropathogenic E. coli; UTI, urinary tract infection




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