Source: https://bmcmicrobiol.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12866-017-1124-1
Timestamp: 2019-04-18 20:44:24+00:00

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Vibrio anguillarum is an extracellular bacterial pathogen that is a causative agent of vibriosis in finfish and crustaceans with mortality rates ranging from 30% to 100%. Mutations in central metabolism (glycolysis and the TCA cycle) of intracellular pathogens often result in attenuated virulence due to depletion of required metabolic intermediates; however, it was not known whether mutations in central metabolism would affect virulence in an extracellular pathogen such as V. anguillarum.
Seven central metabolism mutants were created and characterized with regard to growth in minimal and complex media, expression of virulence genes, and virulence in juvenile rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss). Only the isocitrate dehydrogenase (icd) mutant was attenuated in virulence against rainbow trout challenged by either intraperitoneal injection or immersion. Further, the icd mutant was shown to be immunoprotective against wild type V. anguillarum infection. There was no significant decrease in the expression of the three hemolysin genes detected by qRT-PCR. Additionally, only the icd mutant exhibited a significantly decreased growth yield in complex media. Growth yield was directly related to the abundance of glutamate. A strain with a restored wild type icd gene was created and shown to restore growth to a wild type cell density in complex media and pathogenicity in rainbow trout.
The data strongly suggest that a decreased growth yield, resulting from the inability to synthesize α-ketoglutarate, caused the attenuation despite normal levels of expression of virulence genes. Therefore, the ability of an extracellular pathogen to cause disease is dependent upon the availability of host-supplied nutrients for growth. Additionally, a live vaccine strain could be created from an icd deletion strain.
The aquaculture industry now produces half of all fish intended for human consumption and employs millions of people worldwide . Although the first value sale of harvested fish has increased by 267% between 2004 and 2014 to over US$160 billion, infectious diseases, especially those caused by Vibrio spp. including Vibrio anguillarum, still represent a major impediment to the production of fish . V. anguillarum causes diseases in crustaceans and bivalves, and is the leading causative agent of vibriosis in finfish including salmon, rainbow trout, turbot, sea bass, sea bream, cod, eel, and ayu . Infections by this bacterial species have resulted in severe economic losses to aquaculture industries worldwide .
V. anguillarum is an extracellular pathogen that invades its host fish through the intestine, skin or gills [4, 5]. Systemic infection by V. anguillarum usually causes fish to die within 1–4 days [6–9]. Chemotactic motility and the metalloprotease EmpA have been shown to be important virulence factors during the invasion stage while the siderophore anguibactin, flagellin subunits and lipopolysaccharides were shown to be important for persistence in the host during the post-invasion stage [2, 10]. Three secreted proteins that are cytotoxic against epithelial cells and erythrocytes have been characterized in V. anguillarum: the HlyA homolog Vah1, the phospholipase Plp, and the MARTX toxin RtxA [7, 9, 11]. Mutations in vah1 and/or plp resulted in slight attenuation against juvenile Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar); however, rtxA mutants were avirulent [7, 9, 11]. Additionally, a V. anguillarum mutant that lacks H-NS, a global transcriptional regulator that represses the transcription of vah1, plp, and rtxA, showed attenuation in virulence when injected intraperitoneally, suggesting that proper coordination of gene expression is an important factor during the post-invasion stage .
Since the 1980s, several bacterial species that are auxotrophic for aromatic compounds have been shown to be avirulent [12–16]. More recently, mutants that are hypothesized to experience growth defects in the nutrient limited environment inside a phagocyte have been characterized. In Salmonella enterica, an intracellular bacterial pathogen, some tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle mutant strains were avirulent and immunoprotective for subsequent wild-type S. enterica infection [17–21]. A functional fructose repressor (Cra) was also required for S. enterica infection . Similar results have been observed for central metabolism mutants in other intracellular pathogens such as uropathogenic Escherichia coli (UPEC), Mycobacterium tuberculosis, and the facultative intracellular fish pathogen Edwardsiella ictaluri [23–27]. These observations demonstrate that central metabolism is important for pathogenesis by intracellular pathogens.
Accordingly, we hypothesized that mutations in central metabolism could interrupt the infection process of V. anguillarum in juvenile rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss). In this study, we identified and created six TCA cycle mutant strains plus one fructose metabolism mutant strain, and tested their virulence against juvenile rainbow trout using two infection methods, intraperitoneal (IP) injection and immersion. Further, the expression of each of the three hemolysin genes (vah1, plp, and rtxA) was examined to determine whether attenuation resulted from decreased virulence factor expression in these mutants. The growth rates and yield of each mutant strain in complex media were also determined. We specifically characterized the growth defect of the attenuated icd mutant. We also created, tested, and compared a restored wild type icd strain for virulence and growth to both the wild type and the icd mutant.
V. anguillarum strains (Table 1) were routinely grown in Lysogeny broth containing 2% NaCl (LB20)  or Marine Minimum Median (3M) + 0.15% glucose , supplemented with the appropriate antibiotic, in a shaking water bath at 27 °C. E. coli strains (Table 1) were routinely grown in Lysogeny broth containing 1% NaCl (LB10) supplemented with the appropriate antibiotic, in a shaking water bath at 37 °C. Antibiotics were used at the following concentrations: streptomycin, 200 μg/ml (Sm200); chloramphenicol, 20 μg/ml (Cm20) for E. coli and 5 μg/ml (Cm5) for V. anguillarum; kanamycin, 50 μg/ml (Km50) for E. coli and 80 μg/ml (Km80) for V. anguillarum.
V. anguillarum M93Sm draft genome (accession number NOWD00000000) was annotated by the RAST (Rapid Annotation using Subsystem Technology) service (http://rast.nmpdr.org/rast.cgi) using the default settings . The following annotated genomes were downloaded from NCBI: V. anguillarum 775 (accession numbers: NC_015633.1 and NC_015637.1), 96F (accession number: NZ_AEZA00000000.1), M3 (accession numbers: NC_022223.1, NC_022224.1 and NC_022225.1), NB10 (accession numbers: NZ_LK021130.1, NZ_LK021129.1 and NZ_LK021128.1), RV22 (accession number: AEZB00000000.1) and 90–11-286 (accession numbers: NZ_CP011460.1 and NZ_CP011461.1).
Insertional mutations were made by using a modification of the procedure described by Milton et al. . Briefly, primers (Table 2) were designed based on the target gene sequence of M93Sm. An internal 200–300 bp DNA fragment of the first third of the target gene was PCR amplified and ligated into the suicide vector pNQ705–1 (Table 1) after digestion with SacI and XbaI. The ligation mixture was introduced into E. coli SM10 by electroporation using a BioRad Gene Pulser II (BioRad, Hercules, CA). Transformants were selected on LB10 Cm20 agar plates. The construction of the recombinant pNQ705 was confirmed by both PCR amplification and restriction enzyme analysis. The mobilizable suicide vector was transferred from E. coli SM10 into V. anguillarum by conjugation . Transconjugants were selected by utilizing the chloramphenicol resistance gene located on the suicide plasmid. The incorporation of the recombinant pNQ705 was confirmed by PCR amplification.
Various V. anguillarum strains were tested for virulence against rainbow trout (O. mykiss) by intraperitoneal (IP) injection or immersion. Briefly, V. anguillarum cells grown for 19 h at 27 °C in LB20 supplemented with the appropriate antibiotics were harvested by centrifugation (9000×g, 5 min, 4 °C), washed twice in nine salts solution (NSS), and resuspended in NSS [33, 34]. Aliquots (100 μl) of the V. anguillarum NSS suspension were used to determine the OD600. The V. anguillarum NSS suspension was prepared to the desired specific cell density according to the conversion equation as determined by experimentation (data not shown): Cell density (108 CFU/ml) = 44.905 × OD600. The actual cell density of the suspension was confirmed by dilution and viable plate count. All fish were examined and determined to be disease and injury free prior to the start of each experiment. For IP injection, fish were anesthetized by tricaine methanesulfonate (Western Chemical, Ferndale, WA), (100 mg/l for induction and 52.5 mg/l for maintenance). V. anguillarum strains were IP injected into fish that were between 15 and 25 cm long in a 100 μl NSS vehicle at a dose of either 2 × 105 or 4 × 105 CFU/fish, or with NSS only as a negative control. For immersion, 10 ml of V. anguillarum suspended in NSS, or 10 ml of NSS only as a negative control was added to a bucket filled with 10 L of water supplemented with 1.5% NaCl that was maintained at 18 ± 1 °C. Fish that were between 15 and 25 cm long were added and immersed for 1 h. For both methods, fish inoculated with different bacterial strains were maintained in separate 10-gal (38 L) tanks to prevent possible cross-contamination with constant water flow (200 ml/min) at 18 ± 1 °C. Death due to vibriosis was determined by the observation of gross clinical symptoms and confirmed by the recovery and isolation of V. anguillarum cells resistant to the appropriate antibiotics from the spleen or head kidney of dead fish. Observations were made for 8–14 days. All fish used in this research project were obtained from the URI East Farm Aquaculture Center. All fish infection protocols were approved by the URI IACUC. (IACUC Protocol AN06–08-002).
Exponential phase cells (~0.5 × 108 CFU/ml) of various V. anguillarum strains were treated with RNAprotect Bacteria Reagent (QIAGEN), following the manufacturer’s instructions. Total RNA was isolated using the RNeasy kit and QIAcube (QIAGEN) following the instructions of the manufacturer. All purified RNA samples were quantified spectrophotometrically by measuring absorption at 260 nm and 280 nm using a NanoDrop ND-1000 spectrophotometer (Thermo Fisher Scientific) and overall quality was assessed by gel electrophoresis. Samples were stored at −75 °C for future use.
qRT-PCR was used to quantify various mRNAs using an LightCycler® 480 Real-Time PCR System (Hoffmann-La Roche Inc.) and the Brilliant II SYBR Green Single-Step QRT-PCR Master Mix (Agilent Technologies), with 10 ng of total RNA in 20 μl reaction mixtures. The thermal profile was 50 °C for 30 min, 95 °C for 15 min, and then 40 cycles of 95 °C for 30 s and 55 °C for 30 s. Fluorescence was measured at the end of the 55 °C stage of each cycle. Samples were run in triplicate along with the no-reverse-transcriptase control and the no-template control. All experiments were repeated at least twice.
To cultivate bacteria for growth experiments, V. anguillarum cells grown overnight at 27 °C in LB20 supplemented with the appropriate antibiotics were harvested by centrifugation (9000×g, 2 min), washed twice and resuspended in in NSS. A 200 μl aliquot of the V. anguillarum NSS suspension was transferred into a 96-well plate with a clear flat bottom and the optical density at 600 nm (OD600) was read by a VersaMax™ Absorbance Microplate Reader (Molecular Devices). The V. anguillarum NSS suspension was prepared to an OD600 of 0.420 (~4 × 107 CFU/ml) and diluted 1:100 into fresh media. Growth was monitored either by measurement of the OD600 or by serial dilution and plate counts.
V. anguillarum icd mutant cells grown in LB20 supplemented with appropriate antibiotics for 19 h at 27 °C were harvested by centrifugation (9000×g, 2 min), washed three times in NSS, and resuspended in NSS. Cell suspensions (100 μl) were spread onto Marine Minimum Median (3 M) + 0.15% glucose agar. Well-isolated colonies were picked and subsequently streak purified onto a new 3 M + 0.15% glucose agar. Isolated colonies were then transferred to LB20Cm5 agar to screen for chloramphenicol sensitivity. Resolution of the merodiploid was confirmed by PCR amplification.
A Kaplan-Meier survival analysis with log rank significance test was performed on the survival curves in the fish infection experiment. Student’s T-tests assuming unequal variances were used for experiments containing two data groups. One-way ANOVA with Tukey post hoc test was performed for all other experiments. P values of <0.05 were considered statistically significant.
In order to identify gene targets for mutagenesis the published genomes of V. anguillarum strains 775, 96F, M3, NB10, RV22, 90-11-286 and the V. anguillarum M93Sm draft genome (accession number NOWD00000000) annotated by RAST were examined and found to have the following TCA cycle genes/operons: gltA, acnB, icd, sucAB, sucCD, sdhCDAB, frdABCD fumA, and mdh (Fig. 1 and Table 3). While this set of genes allows for a fully functional TCA cycle, none of the strains have a fumC gene, which encodes the aerobic fumarate class II hydratase. All strains also lack the anaerobic fumarate hydratase (fumB) gene. Additionally, all strains possessed cra, which encodes the repressor of fructose metabolism in S. enterica . The V. anguillarum M93Sm sequences for the icd, sucA, sucC, sdhC, fumA, mdh, and cra genes were used to create insertional mutations in V. anguillarum M93Sm. The seven mutant strains and the one restored strain listed in Table 1 were constructed using the primers listed in Table 2 as described in the Methods.
The virulence of the seven V. anguillarum metabolism mutants were tested on rainbow trout and compared to wild type M93Sm in order to determine if mutations in metabolism could affect pathogenesis. Groups of five fish were infected by IP-injection (as described in the Methods) with either the wild type (M93Sm), icd mutant (XM420), sucA mutant (XM440), sucC mutant (XM450), sdhC mutant (XM460), fumA mutant (XM470), mdh mutant (XM410) or cra mutant (XM430) in NSS at a dosage of ~2 × 105 CFU per fish. Injection with NSS only served as a negative control (Mock). During the 14-day observation window, 40% of M93Sm infected fish survived. Fish infected with the sucA mutant, sdhC mutant or icd mutant had a higher survival percentage than M93Sm (50% for sucA mutant, 80% for sdhC mutant, and 100% for icd mutant); however, only the difference between the icd mutant and M93Sm was statistically significant (p = 0.037) (Fig. 2a). The experiment was repeated using a two-fold higher dose (~4 × 105 CFU per fish) of M93Sm and the three mutant strains (icd mutant, sucA mutant and sdhC mutant) that exhibited attenuated virulence in the previous experiment. At this dose, only 20% of M93Sm-infected fish survived. Only the icd mutant-infected fish had a statically significant higher survival percentage (100%) compared to M93Sm (p = 0.0153) (Fig. 2b). The data indicate the icd mutant is avirulent in these experimental conditions.
Further, we tested the virulence of M93Sm and the icd mutant by another infection route. Groups of 10 fish were infected by immersion as described in the Methods with M93Sm or icd mutant in 1.5% salt solution at a dose of ~4 × 106 CFU/ml, or just immersed in a 1.5% salt solution without V. anguillarum as a negative control (Mock). During the 14-day observation window, there was a statistically significant difference (p = 0.007) between the survival of M93Sm infected fish (30%) and icd mutant infected fish (90%) (Fig. 3). Taken together, the IP infection data and the immersion infection data demonstrate that the icd mutant is highly attenuated for infection in rainbow trout.
Fish previously challenged by immersion with the icd mutant were subsequently challenged with the wild type M93Sm strain to test if the icd mutant was immunogenic. Six weeks after the initial infection, a group of five fish that survived the initial infection with the icd mutant (labeled as “treated with the icd mutant” in Fig. 4) and a group of five “untreated” fish were infected via immersion with M93Sm at a dose of ~4 × 106 CFU/ml and were observed for 14 days. By day 2 all fish in the untreated group died. All fish in the group treated with the icd mutant survived the 14-day observation period. The difference between the two experimental groups was statistically significant (p = 0.008). The results indicate that the icd mutant is immunogenic and protective against wild type infection when administered by immersion.
Vah1, RtxA, and Plp are the three hemolysins found in M93Sm and are responsible for the hemolytic/cytolytic activity against fish erythrocytes, leukocyte and epithelial cells [7, 9, 11] and unpublished data]. We tested the expression of vah1, rtxA and plp during exponential phase to determine whether mutations in metabolism could affect the expression of these hemolysin genes. Data indicate that in all mutants except the icd mutant, expression of vah1 and plp were up regulated by 1.49–16.15-fold compared to M93Sm with most of the changes being significant (Fig. 5). In the icd mutant, expression of plp was up regulated by 1.76-fold while the expression of vah1 was slightly decreased (to 49% of WT), neither of which was a significant change from M93Sm (Fig. 5). Plp is the most efficient hemolysin against fish erythrocytes . TCA cycle mutants with an increased expression of plp also demonstrated an increased zone of hemolysis on 5% fish blood agar plates (Additional file 1: Figure S1). There was no change in the zone of hemolysis for the icd mutant. Expression of rtxA in all mutants was not significantly different from M93Sm (Fig. 5). Taken together, all metabolism mutants have the same or higher expression levels of hemolysin genes compared to the wild type.
Figure 6 shows the typical growth curves for the wild type V. anguillarum M93Sm and the seven metabolism mutants in LB20 broth. In these growth conditions, M93Sm, the icd mutant, and the cra mutant exhibited classic bacterial growth curves with a lag phase, an exponential phase and a stationary phase. The sucA, sucC, sdhC, fumA and mdh mutants all exhibited a two-stage growth curve, with each stage consisting of a lag phase and an exponential phase. The exponential phase in the first growth stage was named exponential phase I and the exponential phase in the second growth stage was named exponential phase II. The generation times of the exponential phases of all mutants were longer than for M93Sm (Table 4). The final cell density (measured by OD600) of the icd mutant after 23 h was the lowest among all strains. Similarly, after 24 h of growth in LB20 the final cell density (CFU/ml) of the icd mutant was 47% that of M93Sm (Table 5) and the difference is significant (p = 0.011). M93Sm and the icd mutant were grown in NSS supplemented with 200 μg protein/ml of fish gastrointestinal mucus (NSSM) to better replicate conditions within a host. After 24 h of growth in NSSM the final cell density of the icd mutant was only ~31% of that for M93Sm (Table 5) and the difference is significant (p = 0.007).
The icd mutant is unable convert isocitrate into α-ketoglutarate, the immediate precursor of glutamate. Consequently, the icd mutant was only able to grow in 3 M + 0.15% glucose with the addition of glutamate (Fig. 7a). Glutamate was added to LB20 to determine if the icd mutant final cell density would increase. Figure 7b shows the typical growth curves of M93Sm and the icd mutant in LB20 with (solid lines) and without (dashed lines) the addition of 118 mM of glutamate. After 24 h, M93Sm and the icd mutant grew to similar final cell densities when LB20 was supplemented with 118 mM glutamate. Additionally, Fig. 7c demonstrate that decreasing the amount of glutamate (from 118 mM to 2.95 mM) added to LB20 decreases the final cell density of the icd mutant, but not M93Sm, after 24 h of growth. The final cell density of the icd mutant was not restored to a wild type level when LB20 was supplemented with glucose, succinate (Additional file 2: Figure S2) or gluconate (Fig. 7c).
A revertant to the wild type icd gene was selected to demonstrate that the icd mutant (XM420, a merodiploid with an insertion in the icd gene) contained no additional mutations that could be causing the loss of pathogenicity and decreased cell density. Initially, attempts were made to complement the icd mutant in trans by cloning icd and its native promoter into the pSUP203 vector; however, all pSUP203-icd vectors isolated from E. coli SM10 contained single nucleotide substitutions that resulted in amino acid changes in icd that inactivated isocitrate dehydrogenase (data not shown). Since the icd mutant is unable to grow on 3M + glucose, icd mutants that spontaneously resolved the merodiploid were isolated on 3M + glucose agar plates as described in the Methods. The reversion rate of the icd mutant to a wild type phenotype grown in LB20 overnight was calculated to be 1 out of 1.6 × 1010 cells. Additional file 3: Figure S3 shows the typical growth curves for M93Sm, the icd mutant and the restored icd strain in LB20 and 3M + 0.15% glucose. M93Sm and the restored icd strain were able to grow in 3M + 0.15% glucose unlike the icd mutant (Additional file 3: Figure S3A). Additionally, when the strains were grown in LB20 the final cell density returned to wild type levels when icd was restored (Additional file 3: Figure S3B). To determine if restoring icd restores pathogenicity, juvenile rainbow trout were challenged via immersion with M93Sm, the icd mutant and the restored icd strain at a dose of between 4 × 106 and 8 × 106 CFU/ml. After day 8, 26% (5/19) of the M93Sm challenged fish, 40% (6/15) of the restored icd challenged fish and 95% (19/20) of the icd mutant challenged fish survived (Fig. 8). There was no statistically significant difference between M93Sm and the restored icd strain ( p= 0.50). Again, there was a statistically significant difference between M93Sm and the icd mutant (p < 0.00004). The results indicate that when the merodiploid present in the icd mutant is resolved, wild type levels of growth in 3M + 0.15% glucose and LB20 and pathogenicity against juvenile rainbow trout is returned.
The tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle is involved in the generation of energy through the oxidation of acetate. TCA intermediates serve as precursor metabolites for the synthesis of amino acids and peptidoglycan. The M93Sm genome along with the published genomes of V. anguillarum strains 775, 96F, M3, NB10, RV22, 90-11-286 were examined for TCA cycle enzymes and the following genes were found: gltA, acnB, icd, sucAB, sucCD, sdhCDAB, frdABCD, fumA, and mdh (Fig. 1 and Table 3). Additionally, cra, which encodes the repressor of fructose metabolism in S. enterica and E. coli and has previously been shown to be essential for S. enterica virulence, is present in the V. anguillarum genomes .
When in a nutrient limited environment, bacteria must be able to synthesize any essential metabolites that are not freely available in order to grow. Previous studies have shown that mutations in central metabolism genes result in attenuation of virulence in several intracellular pathogens including S. enterica, uropathogenic E. coli (UPEC), M. tuberculosis and E. ictaluri [17–19, 21, 23–26]. These observations suggest that central metabolism is necessary for these intracellular pathogens to function inside the nutrient-limited environment of the phagosome; however, V. anguillarum is not an intracellular pathogen. While some studies have suggested that V. anguillarum can survive internally in fish epithelial cells and CHSE cells (derived from pooled embryonic cells from Oncorhynchus tshawytscha), more recent studies have demonstrated that V. anguillarum actively evades phagocytosis by fish epithelial cells and cannot survive for 24 h in macrophages [35–38]. In this study, fish were infected with V. anguillarum strains by either of two methods: intraperitoneal injection or immersion with both methods resulting in a similar percent survival when fish were challenged with M93Sm (20% for injection, see Fig. 2a and b; 0%~30% for immersion, see Fig. 3). Only the icd mutant had a statistically significant higher level of survival compared to the wild type, 100% for IP injection (Fig. 2a and b) and 90% for immersion (Fig. 3). It is not thought that reversion of the merodiploid to a wild type phenotype caused the other metabolism mutants to be virulent because chloramphenicol resistant colonies were isolated from the organs of dead fish. IP injection bypasses the need for invasion. No mortalities resulted from IP injection with the icd mutant indicating that icd is required for V. anguillarum persistence and growth in fish tissues. Rainbow trout infected with the icd mutant via immersion and subsequently challenged with the M93Sm wild type showed 100% survival (Fig. 4) demonstrating that the icd mutant had immunoprotective effects and elicited an adaptive immune response. Moreover, as a proof of concept, the data suggest that an icd deletion mutant could be the basis for a live attenuated vaccine against V. anguillarum infection.
Our observation that a knockout of the icd gene results in attenuation of virulence raises the question of whether expression of required virulence genes is significantly reduced in the mutant and, therefore, results in attenuation. We previously identified and characterized three hemolysin/cytolysin genes and their encoded proteins secreted by V. anguillarum: plp, vah1 and rtxA [7, 9, 11]. While mutations in plp and vah1 have modest effects on virulence against fish epithelial cells and fish, a knockout mutation in rtxA is avirulent in fish [7, 9, 11]. All metabolism mutants exhibited no significant declines in the expression of three hemolysins (Fig. 5) and most of the mutants exhibited increased expression. Accordingly, the icd mutant is not attenuated by the lack of hemolysin production because the decrease in rtxA and vah1 expression was not significant; however, future studies could examine the expression of other virulence factors. It is unclear why expression of plp and vah1 is increased in the metabolism mutants. Minato et al.  demonstrated the accumulation of acetyl-CoA in Vibrio cholerae central metabolism mutants resulted in an increased expression of its virulence gene activator ToxT. It is possible that accumulation or depletion of certain metabolites in V. anguillarum could increase hemolysin/cytolysin expression. Expression of hlyU, the positive regulator of the both the vah1 plp gene cluster and the rtxA gene cluster, was examined and shown to be up-regulated in the sucA and mdh mutants (data not shown) . However, the increased expression of hlyU may not be the sole explanation for the increased expression of plp and vah1 because an increase in expression of rtxA should have also occurred.
The growth rate and final cell density was determined for all metabolism mutants grown in LB20 for 24 h. The slowest growing mutant, fumA, was as virulent as the wild type while the mutant with the lowest final cell density, icd, was attenuated suggesting that decreased final cell density results in a loss of pathogenicity against rainbow trout (Figs. 2, 6, Tables 4 and 5). When the mutation in icd was resolved, the restored icd strain demonstrated the wild type phenotype for both growth and pathogenicity (Additional file 3: Figure S3A and B and Fig. 8). While it is possible that the insertional mutation affected the expression of the two genes flanking icd (ribosomal large subunit pseudouridine synthase E (Accession number: WP_017043910.1) and cold shock domain protein CspD (Accession number: WP_013857087.1)), it is unlikely as neither gene is part of an operon that includes icd. Since isocitrate dehydrogenase catalyzes the formation of α-ketoglutarate (the immediate precursor of glutamate) from isocitrate, the icd mutant is auxotrophic for glutamate (Fig. 7a). Our data demonstrate that the icd mutant stops growing once exogenous glutamate or its derivatives are exhausted (Fig. 7b and c). The data also demonstrate the decreased growth yield was not do to a reduction of ATP production as addition of gluconate or succinate did not restore growth to a wild type cell density. It is interesting that the only other auxotrophic mutant, sucA, grows to a wild type cell density in LB20 and is as virulent as the wild type considering it cannot synthesize succinyl-CoA, a metabolite needed for the synthesis of lysine, methionine and diaminopimelic acid. Presumably, succinyl-CoA or its derivatives are not limiting in LB20 or in fish tissues. Furthermore, this also suggests that the icd mutant is primarily starved for glutamate and would not need to synthesize succinyl-CoA by metabolizing glutamate to α-ketoglutarate. We hypothesize that during infection the icd mutant is unable to obtain enough α-ketoglutarate derivatives to grow to a wild type cell density and, therefore, cannot reach a cell density necessary for a successful systemic infection. In support, it has previously been demonstrated that a V. anguillarum M93Sm mugA mutant that was unable to grow in salmon intestinal mucus was avirulent against Atlantic salmon . Additionally, when V. anguillarum 775 was cured of its plasmid-encoded siderophore, the mutant was unable to sequester iron and exhibited decreased virulence [42, 43].
M93Sm is an O2α serotype and the presumed infection route is through the gastrointestinal tract as no necrotic skin lesions have ever been observed with this strain (unpublished data). The in vitro growth experiment (Table 5) suggests that there are not enough α-ketoglutarate derivatives in intestinal mucus to support the growth of the icd mutant to a wild type cell density even though it is the metabolite with the second highest concentration (3.03 mM) in rainbow trout mucus . It should be noted that for in vitro growth experiments the concentrations of glutamate and glutamine in the mucus are not known and the growth conditions represent an ideal environment for growth; V. anguillarum does not have to evade the fish immune system or compete with commensal bacteria and it is not expected that the icd mutant will grow to the cell density shown in the in vitro growth experiments in the fish. As demonstrated by Muroga et al.,  V. anguillarum found in the spleen and intestine of moribund fish challenged via immersion only reached a cell density of 4.0 × 108 CFU/g and 2.5 × 107 CFU/g respectively. Altinok et al.  showed a V. anguillarum succinate dehydrogenase mutant was avirulent against rainbow trout when injected at a dose at 105 CFU. Similar to our results, the authors showed that the succinate dehydrogenase mutant grew to a cell density slightly lower than the wild type at 12 h; however, the authors failed to show the growth yield at 24 h. Further, the authors did not create a complement strain to demonstrate that the loss of virulence was solely do to mutating sdhB. Most importantly, the ATCC has redesignated their strain as a Pseudomonas species.
Seven V. anguillarum metabolism mutants were created and examined for pathogenicity against juvenile rainbow trout, hemolysin/cytolysin expression and growth in rich media. Of the central metabolism mutants, only the icd mutant showed strong attenuation in virulence, which did not result from a decrease in virulence factor expression. In addition, only the icd mutant had a final cell density that was lower than the wild type, which resulted from the inability to synthesize α-ketoglutarate and downstream metabolites. Taken together, the data suggest that during infection, if V. anguillarum is unable to synthesize essential molecules (e.g. α-ketoglutarate/2-oxoglutarate) and when those molecules or their derivatives (e.g. glutamate, glutamine) become limiting in the host, V. anguillarum will be unable to grow to a density necessary to sustain a systemic infection of the host.
All DNA sequencing and qRT-PCR analyses were conducted at a Rhode Island NSF EPSCoR research facility, the Genomics and Sequencing Center, supported in part by the National Science Foundation EPSCoR Cooperative Agreement #EPS-1004057.
This work was funded by a grant from the USDA-NIFA-AFRI (grant number 2016–67016-24,905). The funding body had no role in the design of the experiments or the interpretation of the data.
All datasets are presented in this manuscript. Bacterial strains and plasmids are available from the corresponding author upon reasonable request.
Conceived and designed the experiments: XM, EJS, DRN. Performed the experiments: XM, EJS, SLH. Analyzed the data: XM, EJS, DRN. Wrote the paper: XM, EJS, DRN. All authors have read and approved the final version of the manuscript.
All animal procedures were conducted according to the guidelines and with the approval of the University of Rhode Island Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee (Reference number AN06–08-002).
Frans I, Michiels CW, Bossier P, Willems KA, Lievens B, Rediers H. Vibrio anguillarum as a fish pathogen: virulence factors, diagnosis and prevention. J Fish Dis. 2011;34(9):643–61. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2761.2011.01279.x.

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