4.4 Article

Arginine-dependent acid-resistance pathway in Shigella boydii

Journal

ARCHIVES OF MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 193, Issue 3, Pages 179-185

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00203-010-0656-7

Keywords

Microbial food safety; Acid resistance; Traveler's diarrhea

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Ability to survive the low pH of the human stomach is considered be an important virulent determinant. It was suggested that the unique acid tolerance of Shigella boydii 18 CDPH, the strain implicated in a 1998 outbreak, may have played an important role in surviving the acidic food (bean salad). The strain was capable of inducing arginine-dependent acid-resistance (ADAR) pathway. This pathway was assumed lobe absent in Shigella sp. Here, we have examined occurrence and efficacy of ADAR pathway in 21 S. boydii strains obtained from the American Type Culture Collection (ATCC) along with strains of S. flexneri (n = 7). S. sonnei (n = 4), and S. dysenteriae (n = 2). The eight S. boydii strains were able to induce ADAR to survive the acid challenge at pH 2.0; additional 8 strains could tolerate acid challenge at pH 2.5 but not at pH 2.0. The remaining five S. boydii strains were not able to induce ADAR pathway and could not survive acid challenge even at pH 2.5. ADAR pathway also appears lobe present in all four Shigella sp. Shigella ADAR pathway was induced when cells were grown under partial oxygen pressure while its expression in E. coli required mere fermentative growth on glucose.

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