Mechanisms to Evade the Phagocyte Respiratory Burst Arose by Convergent Evolution in Typhoidal Salmonella Serovars

Publication date: 13 February 2018 Source:Cell Reports, Volume 22, Issue 7 Author(s): Hirotaka Hiyoshi, Tamding Wangdi, Gabriel Lock, Cheng Saechao, Manuela Raffatellu, Brian A. Cobb, Andreas J. Bäumler Typhoid fever caused by Salmonella enterica serovar (S.) Typhi differs in its clinical presentation from gastroenteritis caused by S. Typhimurium and other non-typhoidal Salmonella serovars. The different clinical presentations are attributed in part to the virulence-associated capsular polysaccharide (Vi antigen) of S. Typhi, which prevents phagocytes from triggering a respiratory burst by preventing antibody-mediated complement activation. Paradoxically, the Vi antigen is absent from S. Paratyphi A, which causes a disease that is indistinguishable from typhoid fever. Here, we show that evasion of the phagocyte respiratory burst by S. Paratyphi A required very long O antigen chains containing the O2 antigen to inhibit antibody binding. We conclude that the ability to avoid the phagocyte respiratory burst is a property distinguishing typhoidal from non-typhoidal Salmonella serovars that was acquired by S. Typhi and S. Paratyphi A independently through convergent evolution. Graphical abstract Teaser The clinical presentation of typhoid fever differs from gastroenteritis, which has been attributed to the Salmonella enterica serovar (S.) Typhi capsular polysaccharide. Paradoxically, S. Paratyphi A is not capsulated but causes typhoid-like disease. Hiyoshi et al. show t...
Source: Cell Reports - Category: Cytology Source Type: research