Contribution of SPI-1 bistability to Salmonella enterica cooperative virulence: insights from single cell analysis

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Abstract

Salmonella enterica pathogenicity island 1 (SPI-1) is a gene cluster that encodes a type III secretion system and effectors involved in epithelial cell invasion. SPI-1 undergoes bistable expression, with concomitant formation of SPI-1ON and SPI-1OFF lineages. This study describes single cell analysis of SP1-1 bistability and epithelial cell invasion, and reports the unsuspected observation that optimal invasion of epithelial cells requires the presence of both SPI-1ON and SPI-1OFF subpopulations. The contribution of SPI-1OFF cells to optimal invasion may rely on their ability to invade epithelial cells if a SPI-1ON subpopulation is present. In fact, Salmonella SPI-1 mutants are also able to invade epithelial cells in the presence of SPI-1ONSalmonellae, a phenomenon described in the 1990’s by Galán and co-workers. Invasion by SPI-1OFF cells does not seem to involve a diffusible factor. A small number of SPI-1ON cells is sufficient to endow the bacterial population with invasion capacity, a feature that may permit host colonization regardless of the bottlenecks encountered by Salmonella populations inside animals.

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Sánchez-Romero, M. A., & Casadesús, J. (2018). Contribution of SPI-1 bistability to Salmonella enterica cooperative virulence: insights from single cell analysis. Scientific Reports, 8(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-33137-z

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