Killing of Caenorhabditis elegans by Pseudomonas aeruginosa used to model mammalian bacterial pathogenesis
- 19 January 1999
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 96 (2) , 715-720
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.96.2.715
Abstract
We show that a single clinical isolate of the human opportunistic pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa (strain PA14), which previously was shown to be pathogenic in mice and plants, also kills Caenorhabditis elegans . The rate of PA14-mediated killing of C. elegans depends on the composition of the agar medium on which PA14 is grown. When PA14 is grown on minimal medium, killing occurs over the course of several days and is referred to as “slow” killing. When PA14 is grown on high-osmolarity medium, killing occurs over the course of several hours and is referred to as “fast” killing. Several lines of evidence, including the fact that heat-killed bacteria are still capable of fast but not slow killing of C. elegans , indicate that fast and slow killing occur by distinct mechanisms. Slow killing involves an infection-like process and correlates with the accumulation of PA14 within worm intestines. Among 10 PA14 virulence-related mutants that had been shown previously to affect pathogenicity in plants and mice, 6 were less effective in killing C. elegans under both fast- and slow-killing conditions, indicating a high degree of commonalty among the P. aeruginosa factors required for pathogenicity in disparate eukaryotic hosts. Thus, we show that a C. elegans pathogenicity model that is genetically tractable from the perspectives of both host and pathogen can be used to model mammalian bacterial pathogenesis.Keywords
This publication has 49 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Dorsoventral Regulatory Gene Cassette spätzle/Toll/cactus Controls the Potent Antifungal Response in Drosophila AdultsCell, 1996
- Plant Defensins: Novel Antimicrobial Peptides as Components of the Host Defense SystemPlant Physiology, 1995
- Innate immunity of insectsCurrent Opinion in Immunology, 1995
- A Quantitative Model of Invasive Pseudomonas Infection in Burn InjuryJournal of Burn Care & Rehabilitation, 1994
- Identification of a protein required for disulfide bond formation in vivoPublished by Elsevier ,1991
- Virulence of Selected Phytopathogenic Pseudomonads inArabidopsis thalianaMolecular Plant-Microbe Interactions®, 1991
- Activation in vitro of NF-κB" by phosphorylation of its inhibitor IκB"Nature, 1990
- Broad host range DNA cloning system for gram-negative bacteria: construction of a gene bank of Rhizobium meliloti.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1980
- Genetic Recombination in Pseudomonas aeruginosaMicrobiology, 1955
- A Phytopathogenic Bacterium Fatal to Laboratory AnimalsScience, 1941