The Salmonella dublin virulence plasmid mediates systemic but not enteric phases of salmonellosis in cattle

TS Wallis, SM Paulin, JS Plested, PR Watson… - Infection and …, 1995 - Am Soc Microbiol
TS Wallis, SM Paulin, JS Plested, PR Watson, PW Jones
Infection and immunity, 1995Am Soc Microbiol
Plasmid-bearing and plasmid-free isolates and a plasmid-cured strain of Salmonella dublin
were compared for virulence in calves. The plasmid-bearing strains were highly virulent,
causing severe enteric and systemic disease with high mortality. In contrast, the plasmid-free
strains caused diarrhea but only low mortality. The infection kinetics of a wild-type and a
derivative plasmid-cured strain were compared. Both strains were isolated in high numbers
from intestinal sites at 3 and 6 days after oral challenge and were isolated at comparable …
Plasmid-bearing and plasmid-free isolates and a plasmid-cured strain of Salmonella dublin were compared for virulence in calves. The plasmid-bearing strains were highly virulent, causing severe enteric and systemic disease with high mortality. In contrast, the plasmid-free strains caused diarrhea but only low mortality. The infection kinetics of a wild-type and a derivative plasmid-cured strain were compared. Both strains were isolated in high numbers from intestinal sites at 3 and 6 days after oral challenge and were isolated at comparable frequencies from systemic sites at 3 days, but not at 6 days, when the wild-type strain was predominant. The strains were equally invasive in intestinal epithelia with and without Peyer's patch and elicited comparable secretory and inflammatory responses and intestinal pathology in ligated ileal loops. The effect of the virulence plasmid on growth kinetics and on the outer membrane protein profile was assessed in an in vivo growth chamber. The virulence plasmid did not influence either extracellular growth or the expression of major outer membrane proteins. These observations demonstrate that the virulence plasmid is not involved in either the enteric phase of infection or the systemic dissemination of S. dublin but probably mediates the persistence of S. dublin at systemic sites.
American Society for Microbiology