Escherichia coli isolate for studying colonization of the mouse intestine and its application to two-component signaling knockouts

M Lasaro, Z Liu, R Bishar, K Kelly… - Journal of …, 2014 - Am Soc Microbiol
M Lasaro, Z Liu, R Bishar, K Kelly, S Chattopadhyay, S Paul, E Sokurenko, J Zhu, M Goulian
Journal of bacteriology, 2014Am Soc Microbiol
The biology of Escherichia coli in its primary niche, the animal intestinal tract, is remarkably
unexplored. Studies with the streptomycin-treated mouse model have produced important
insights into the metabolic requirements for Escherichia coli to colonize mice. However, we
still know relatively little about the physiology of this bacterium growing in the complex
environment of an intestine that is permissive for the growth of competing flora. We have
developed a system for studying colonization using an E. coli strain, MP1, isolated from a …
Abstract
The biology of Escherichia coli in its primary niche, the animal intestinal tract, is remarkably unexplored. Studies with the streptomycin-treated mouse model have produced important insights into the metabolic requirements for Escherichia coli to colonize mice. However, we still know relatively little about the physiology of this bacterium growing in the complex environment of an intestine that is permissive for the growth of competing flora. We have developed a system for studying colonization using an E. coli strain, MP1, isolated from a mouse. MP1 is genetically tractable and does not require continuous antibiotic treatment for stable colonization. As an application of this system, we separately knocked out each two-component system response regulator in MP1 and performed competitions against the wild-type strain. We found that only three response regulators, ArcA, CpxR, and RcsB, produce strong colonization defects, suggesting that in addition to anaerobiosis, adaptation to cell envelope stress is a critical requirement for E. coli colonization of the mouse intestine. We also show that the response regulator OmpR, which had previously been hypothesized to be important for adaptation between in vivo and ex vivo environments, is not required for MP1 colonization due to the presence of a third major porin.
American Society for Microbiology