yersiniabactin and Pneumonia--Bacterial

yersiniabactin has been researched along with Pneumonia--Bacterial* in 3 studies

Other Studies

3 other study(ies) available for yersiniabactin and Pneumonia--Bacterial

ArticleYear
Early cytokine response to lethal challenge of Klebsiella pneumoniae averted the prognosis of pneumonia in FyuA immunized mice.
    Microbial pathogenesis, 2020, Volume: 144

    Topics: Animals; Bacterial Load; Bacterial Proteins; Bacterial Vaccines; Female; Immunization; Interleukin-17; Interleukin-1beta; Klebsiella Infections; Klebsiella pneumoniae; Lung; Mice; Mice, Inbred BALB C; Phenols; Pneumonia, Bacterial; Receptors, Cell Surface; Thiazoles; Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha

2020
Interaction of lipocalin 2, transferrin, and siderophores determines the replicative niche of Klebsiella pneumoniae during pneumonia.
    mBio, 2012, Nov-20, Volume: 3, Issue:6

    Pathogenic bacteria require iron for replication within their host. Klebsiella pneumoniae and other Gram-negative pathogens produce the prototypical siderophore enterobactin (Ent) to scavenge iron in vivo. In response, mucosal surfaces secrete lipocalin 2 (Lcn2), an innate immune protein that binds Ent to disrupt bacterial iron acquisition and promote acute inflammation during colonization. A subset of K. pneumoniae isolates attempt to evade Lcn2 by producing glycosylated Ent (Gly-Ent, salmochelin) or the alternative siderophore yersiniabactin (Ybt). However, these siderophores are not functionally equivalent and differ in their abilities to promote growth in the upper respiratory tract, lungs, and serum. To understand how Lcn2 exploits functional differences between siderophores, isogenic mutants of an Ent(+) Gly-Ent(+) Ybt(+) K. pneumoniae strain were inoculated into Lcn2(+/+) and Lcn2(-/-) mice, and the pattern of pneumonia was examined. Lcn2 effectively protected against the iroA ybtS mutant (Ent(+) Gly-Ent(-) Ybt(-)). Lcn2(+/+) mice had small foci of pneumonia, whereas Lcn2(-/-) mice had many bacteria in the perivascular space. The entB mutant (Ent(-) Ybt(+) Gly-Ent(-)) caused moderate bronchopneumonia but did not invade the transferrin-containing perivascular space. Accordingly, transferrin blocked Ybt-dependent growth in vitro. The wild type and the iroA mutant, which both produce Ent and Ybt, had a mixed phenotype, causing a moderate bronchopneumonia in Lcn2(+/+) mice and perivascular overgrowth in Lcn2(-/-) mice. Together, these data indicate that Lcn2, in combination with transferrin, confines K. pneumoniae to the airways and prevents invasion into tissue containing the pulmonary vasculature.. Gram-negative bacteria are a common cause of severe hospital-acquired infections. To cause disease, they must obtain iron and secrete the small molecule enterobactin to do so. Animal models of pneumonia using Klebsiella pneumoniae indicate that enterobactin promotes severe disease. Accordingly, the host defense protein lipocalin 2 exploits this common target by binding enterobactin and disrupting its function. However, pathogenic bacteria often make additional siderophores that lipocalin 2 cannot bind, such as yersiniabactin, which could make this host defense ineffective. This work compares the pattern and severity of pneumonia caused by K. pneumoniae based on which siderophores it produces. The results indicate that enterobactin promotes growth around blood vessels that are rich in the iron-binding protein transferrin, but yersiniabactin does not. Together, transferrin and lipocalin 2 protect this space against all types of K. pneumoniae tested. Therefore, the ability to acquire iron determines where bacteria can grow in the lung.

    Topics: Acute-Phase Proteins; Animals; Enterobactin; Host-Pathogen Interactions; Klebsiella Infections; Klebsiella pneumoniae; Lipocalin-2; Lipocalins; Mice; Mice, Knockout; Oncogene Proteins; Phenols; Pneumonia, Bacterial; Protein Binding; Thiazoles; Transferrin; Virulence Factors

2012
Yersiniabactin is a virulence factor for Klebsiella pneumoniae during pulmonary infection.
    Infection and immunity, 2007, Volume: 75, Issue:3

    Iron acquisition systems are essential for the in vivo growth of bacterial pathogens. Despite the epidemiological importance of Klebsiella pneumoniae, few experiments have examined the importance of siderophores in the pathogenesis of this species. A previously reported signature-tagged mutagenesis screen identified an attenuated strain that featured an insertional disruption in ybtQ, which encodes a transporter for the siderophore yersiniabactin. We used this finding as a starting point to evaluate the importance of siderophores in the physiology and pathogenesis of K. pneumoniae. Isogenic strains carrying in-frame deletions in genes required for the synthesis of either enterobactin or yersiniabactin were constructed, and the growth of these mutants was examined both in vitro and in vivo using an intranasal infection model. The results suggest divergent functions for each siderophore in different environments, with enterobactin being more important for growth in vitro under iron limitation than in vivo and the reverse being true for the yersiniabactin locus. These observations represent the first examination of isogenic mutants in iron acquisition systems for K. pneumoniae and may indicate that the acquisition of nonenterobactin siderophores is an important step in the evolution of virulent enterobacterial strains.

    Topics: Animals; Female; Klebsiella Infections; Klebsiella pneumoniae; Mice; Mice, Inbred C57BL; Phenols; Pneumonia, Bacterial; Siderophores; Thiazoles; Virulence Factors

2007