The impact of phase variation of Campylobacter jejuni genes on surviving host imune responses and for host adaptation
Abstract
Campylobacter jejuni is a spiral-shaped, flagellated Gram negative bacterium that requires
a low oxygen level to grow. C. jejuni colonises the chicken caeca and infects humans
mostly through consumption of contaminated chicken meat. C. jejuni is a major cause of
severe gastroenteritis with bloody diarrhoea in humans worldwide.
The genomic sequences of C. jejuni have several highly mutable polyG/polyC tracts
containing seven or more G/C residues, which generate variation by either insertion or
deletion of one or more of these repetitive residues. Mutations in the simple sequence
repeat (SSR) tracts of C. jejuni switch the expression of the gene between ‘on’ and ‘off’.
These strain-specific SSRs can mediate phase variation which is an additional way to adapt
and modify bacterial fitness. The phenomenon of phase variation is reversible, stochastic,
and leads to frequent switches in gene expression.
This study focuses on two unpublished C. jejuni isolates LE104 and LE17, and aimed to
investigate the project hypothesis that PV can empower C. jejuni to survive and adapt to
the host’s immune responses, and that the function and the expression of the PV genes
can influence bacterial survival.
A PV assay was developed including; monoplex and multiplex PCR, fragment length
analysis (Genescan) and PSAnalyse together with bioinformatics analyses. Outputs of
these approaches confirmed gene presence and absence and compared the capsular and
flagellar genes among different C. jejuni strains. Also, two different serum bactericidal
assays were performed using different C. jejuni isolates. These results have allowed linkage
of PV genes to conserved functions and possible behaviours in the host. And based on the
results of these PV assays, some suggestions have been made for future work