1. Bacterial fitness in chronic wounds appears to be mediated by the capacity for high-density growth, not virulence or biofilm functions.
- Author
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Morgan SJ, Lippman SI, Bautista GE, Harrison JJ, Harding CL, Gallagher LA, Cheng AC, Siehnel R, Ravishankar S, Usui ML, Olerud JE, Fleckman P, Wolcott RD, Manoil C, and Singh PK
- Subjects
- Adult, Animals, Bacteria growth & development, Bacterial Infections metabolism, Biofilms growth & development, Disease Models, Animal, Female, Genetic Fitness, Host Microbial Interactions physiology, Humans, Male, Mice, Pseudomonas Infections, Pseudomonas aeruginosa metabolism, Pseudomonas aeruginosa pathogenicity, Virulence physiology, Wound Infection metabolism, Wound Infection microbiology, Cell Proliferation physiology, Pseudomonas aeruginosa growth & development, Wound Healing physiology
- Abstract
While much is known about acute infection pathogenesis, the understanding of chronic infections has lagged. Here we sought to identify the genes and functions that mediate fitness of the pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa in chronic wound infections, and to better understand the selective environment in wounds. We found that clinical isolates from chronic human wounds were frequently defective in virulence functions and biofilm formation, and that many virulence and biofilm formation genes were not required for bacterial fitness in experimental mouse wounds. In contrast, genes involved in anaerobic growth, some metabolic and energy pathways, and membrane integrity were critical. Consistent with these findings, the fitness characteristics of some wound impaired-mutants could be represented by anaerobic, oxidative, and membrane-stress conditions ex vivo, and more comprehensively by high-density bacterial growth conditions, in the absence of a host. These data shed light on the bacterial functions needed in chronic wound infections, the nature of stresses applied to bacteria at chronic infection sites, and suggest therapeutic targets that might compromise wound infection pathogenesis., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
- Published
- 2019
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