Genetic requirements for uropathogenic E. coli proliferation in the bladder cell infection cycle

biorxiv(2023)

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摘要
Uropathogenic Escherichia coli (UPEC) requires an adaptable physiology to survive the wide range of environments experienced in the host, including gut and urinary tract surfaces. To identify UPEC genes required during intracellular infection, we developed a transposon-directed insertion-site sequencing (TraDIS) approach for cellular infection models and searched for genes in a library of ~20,000 E. coli UTI89 transposon-insertion mutants that are specifically required for growth in M9-glycerol minimal medium, and at the distinct stages of infection of cultured bladder epithelial cells. Some of the functional requirements apparent for growth in M9-glycerol overlapped with those for the intracellular stage of infection, notably nutrient utilization, polysaccharide and macromolecule precursor biosynthesis, and cell envelope stress tolerance. Two genes implicated in both conditions were confirmed through independent gene deletion studies: neuC (sialic acid capsule biosynthesis) and hisF (histidine biosynthesis). Distinct sets of UPEC genes were also implicated in bacterial dispersal, where UPEC erupt from bladder cells in highly filamentous or motile forms upon exposure to human urine, and during recovery from infection in rich (LB) medium. Genes linked to septal peptidoglycan processes, ytfB and dedD, appeared to play roles in dispersal and may help stabilize cell division or the envelope during envelope stress created during infection. Our findings support a view that the host intracellular environment and infection cycle are multi-nutrient limited and create stress that demand an array of biosynthetic, cell envelope integrity and biofilm-related functions of UPEC. ### Competing Interest Statement The authors have declared no competing interest.
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