Ojha, S., et al. “Clostridium Perfringens Produces an Adhesive Pilus Required for the Pathogenesis of Necrotic Enteritis in Poultry”. Journal of Bacteriology, edited by Michael J. Federle, vol. 203, no. 7, 2021, https://doi.org/10.1128/JB.00578-20.

Genre

  • Journal Article
Contributors
Author: Ojha, S.
Author: Gong, J.
Author: Mehdizadeh Gohari, I.
Editor: Federle, Michael J.
Author: Carere, J.
Author: Prescott, J. F.
Author: Lepp, D.
Author: Yang, C.
Author: Zhou, Y.
Date Issued
2021
Date Published Online
2021-03-08
Abstract

Clostridium perfringens type G strains cause necrotic enteritis (NE) in poultry, an economically important disease that is a major target of in-feed antibiotics. NE is a multifactorial disease, involving not only the critically important NetB toxin but also additional virulence and virulence-associated factors. We previously identified a C. perfringens chromosomal locus (VR-10B) associated with disease-causing strains that is predicted to encode a sortase-dependent pilus. In the current study, we sought to provide direct evidence for the production of a pilus by C. perfringens and establish its role in NE pathogenesis. Pilus structures in virulent C. perfringens strain CP1 were visualized by transmission electron microscopy (TEM) of immunogold-labeled cells. Filamentous structures were observed extending from the cell surface in wild-type CP1 but not from isogenic pilin-null mutant strains. In addition, immunoblotting of cell surface proteins demonstrated that CP1, but not the null mutant strains, produced a high molecular weight ladder-like pattern characteristic of a pilus polymer. Binding to collagen types I, II, and IV was significantly reduced (Tukey's test, P < 0.01) in all three pilin mutants compared to CP1 and could be specifically blocked by CnaA and FimA antisera, indicating that these pilins participate in adherence. Furthermore, fimA and fimB null mutants were both severely attenuated in their ability to cause disease in an in vivo chicken NE challenge model. Together, these results provide the first direct evidence for the production of a sortase-dependent pilus by C. perfringens and confirm its critical role in NE pathogenesis and collagen binding. IMPORTANCE In necrotic enteritis (NE), an intestinal disease of chickens, Clostridium perfringens cells adhere tightly to damaged intestinal tissue, but the factors involved are not known. We previously discovered a cluster of C. perfringens genes predicted to encode a pilus, a hair-like bacterial surface structure commonly involved in adherence. In the current study, we have directly imaged this pilus using transmission electron microscopy (TEM). We also show that inactivation of the pilus genes stops pilus production, significantly reducing the bacterium's ability to bind collagen and cause disease. Importantly, this is the first direct evidence for the production of a sortase-dependent pilus by C. perfringens, revealing a promising new target for developing therapeutics to combat this economically important disease.

Language

  • English
Rights
CC-BY
Funding Note
Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada and Canadian Poultry Research Council
Host Title
Journal of Bacteriology
Host Abbreviated Title
J Bacteriol
Volume
203
Issue
7
ISSN
1098-5530
0021-9193

Rights

  • CC BY