Enterococcus faecium TIR-Domain Genes Are Part of a Gene Cluster Which Promotes Bacterial Survival in Blood

Publication date

2018-01-01

Authors

Wagner, Theresa M.
Janice, Jessin
Paganelli, Fernanda LISNI 0000000419536067
Willems, RobISNI 0000000388459432
Askarian, Fatemeh
Pedersen, Torunn
Top, JanettaORCID 0000-0002-4620-8128ISNI 0000000394714524
Gosselaar-de Haas, Carla J CISNI 0000000395737840
van Strijp, JosORCID 0000-0001-6253-0830ISNI 0000000395049175
Johannessen, Mona

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Abstract

Enterococcus faecium has undergone a transition to a multidrug-resistant nosocomial pathogen. The population structure of E. faecium is characterized by a sharp distinction of clades, where the hospital-adapted lineage is primarily responsible for bacteremia. So far, factors that were identified in hospital-adapted strains and that promoted pathogenesis of nosocomial E. faecium mainly play a role in adherence and biofilm production, while less is known about factors contributing to survival in blood. This study identified a gene cluster, which includes genes encoding bacterial Toll/interleukin-1 receptor-(TIR-) domain-containing proteins (TirEs). The cluster was found to be unique to nosocomial strains and to be located on a putative mobile genetic element of phage origin. The three genes within the cluster appeared to be expressed as an operon. Expression was detected in bacterial culture media and in the presence of human blood. TirEs are released into the bacterial supernatant, and TirE2 is associated with membrane vesicles. Furthermore, the tirE-gene cluster promotes bacterial proliferation in human blood, indicating that TirE may contribute to the pathogenesis of bacteremia.

Keywords

Microbiology, Microbiology (medical)

Citation

Wagner, T M, Janice, J, Paganelli, F L, Willems, R J, Askarian, F, Pedersen, T, Top, J, De Haas, C, Van Strijp, J A, Johannessen, M & Hegstad, K 2018, 'Enterococcus faecium TIR-Domain Genes Are Part of a Gene Cluster Which Promotes Bacterial Survival in Blood', International Journal of Microbiology, vol. 2018, 1435820. https://doi.org/10.1155/2018/1435820