Identification of a pathogenicity island required for Salmonella survival in host cells.

H Ochman, FC Soncini, F Solomon… - Proceedings of the …, 1996 - National Acad Sciences
H Ochman, FC Soncini, F Solomon, EA Groisman
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1996National Acad Sciences
We have identified a region unique to the Salmonella typhimurium chromosome that is
essential for virulence in mice. This region harbors at least three genes: two (spiA and spiB)
encode products that are similar to proteins found in type III secretion systems, and a third
(spiR) encodes a putative regulator. A strain with a mutation in spiA was unable to survive
within macrophages but displayed wild-type levels of epithelial cell invasion. The culture
supernatants of the spi mutants lacked a modified form of flagellin, which was present in the …
We have identified a region unique to the Salmonella typhimurium chromosome that is essential for virulence in mice. This region harbors at least three genes: two (spiA and spiB) encode products that are similar to proteins found in type III secretion systems, and a third (spiR) encodes a putative regulator. A strain with a mutation in spiA was unable to survive within macrophages but displayed wild-type levels of epithelial cell invasion. The culture supernatants of the spi mutants lacked a modified form of flagellin, which was present in the supernatant of the wild-type strain. This suggests that the Spi secretory apparatus exports a protease, or a protein that can alter the activity of a secreted protease. The "pathogenicity island" harboring the spi genes may encode the virulence determinants that set Salmonella apart from other enteric pathogens.
National Acad Sciences