KMID : 0545120180280010059
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Journal of Microbiology and Biotechnology 2018 Volume.28 No. 1 p.59 ~ p.64
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Effect of Gene actA on the Invasion Efficiency of Listeria monocytogenes, as Observed in Healthy and Senescent Intestinal Epithelial Cells
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Ha Ji-Myeong
Oh Hye-Min Kim Se-Jeong Lee Jee-Yeon Lee Soo-Min Lee Hee-Young Choi Yu-Kyung Moon Sung-Sil Choi Kyoung-Hee Yoon Yo-Han
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Abstract
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Listeria monocytogenes can asymptomatically inhabit the human intestine as a commensal bacterium. However, the mechanism by which L. monocytogenes is able to inhabit the intestine without pathogenic symptoms remains unclear. We compared the invasion efficiency of L. monocytogenes strains with the 268- and 385-bp-long actA gene. Clinical strains SMFM-CI-3 and SMFM-CI-6 with 268-bp actA isolated from patients with listeriosis, and strains SMFM-SI-1 and SMFM-SI-2 with the 385-bp gene isolated from carcasses, were used for inoculum preparation. The invasion efficiency of these strains was evaluated using Caco-2 cells (intestinal epithelial cell line), prepared as normal and healthy cells with tightened tight junctions and senescent cells with loose tight junctions that were loosened by adriamycin treatment. The invasion efficiency of L. monocytogenes strains with the 268-bp-long actA gene was 1.1-2.6-times lower than that of the strains with the 385-bp-long gene in normal and healthy cells. However, the invasion efficiency of both types of strains did not differ in senescent cells. Thus, L. monocytogenes strains with the 268-bp-long actA gene can inhabit the intestine asymptomatically as a commensal bacterium, but they may invade the intestinal epithelial cells and cause listeriosis in senescent cells.
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KEYWORD
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Listeria monocytogenes, tight junction, Caco-2 cells, invasion, senescence
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