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Extensive in vivo resilience of persistent Salmonella.


ABSTRACT: Chronic infections caused by persistent pathogens represent an important health problem. Here, we establish a simple practical mouse Salmonella infection model for identifying bacterial maintenance functions that are essential for persistency. In this model, a substantial fraction of Salmonella survived even several days of treatment with a potent fluoroquinolone antibiotic indicating stringency of the model. Evaluation of twelve metabolic defects revealed dramatically different requirements for Salmonella during persistency as compared to acute infections. Disrupted synthesis of unsaturated/cyclopropane fatty acids was the only defect that resulted in rapid Salmonella clearance suggesting that this pathway might contain suitable targets for antimicrobial chemotherapy of chronic infection.

SUBMITTER: Barat S 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC3404010 | biostudies-literature | 2012

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Extensive in vivo resilience of persistent Salmonella.

Barat Somedutta S   Steeb Benjamin B   Mazé Alain A   Bumann Dirk D  

PloS one 20120724 7


Chronic infections caused by persistent pathogens represent an important health problem. Here, we establish a simple practical mouse Salmonella infection model for identifying bacterial maintenance functions that are essential for persistency. In this model, a substantial fraction of Salmonella survived even several days of treatment with a potent fluoroquinolone antibiotic indicating stringency of the model. Evaluation of twelve metabolic defects revealed dramatically different requirements for  ...[more]

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