Intestinal inflammation allows <i>Salmonella</i> to use ethanolamine to compete with the microbiota

Parameth Thiennimitr(Chiang Mai University), Sebastian Winter(University of California, Davis), Maria G. Winter(University of California, Davis), Mariana N. Xavier(University of California, Davis), Vladimir Tolstikov(Joint Center for Structural Genomics), Douglas L. Huseby(University of California, Davis), Torsten Sterzenbach(University of California, Davis), Renée M. Tsolis(University of California, Davis), John R. Roth(University of California, Davis), Andreas J. Bäumler(University of California, Davis)
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
October 3, 2011
Cited by 626

Abstract

Conventional wisdom holds that microbes support their growth in vertebrate hosts by exploiting a large variety of nutrients. We show here that use of a specific nutrient (ethanolamine) confers a marked growth advantage on Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium (S. Typhimurium) in the lumen of the inflamed intestine. In the anaerobic environment of the gut, ethanolamine supports little or no growth by fermentation. However, S. Typhimurium is able to use this carbon source by inducing the gut to produce a respiratory electron acceptor (tetrathionate), which supports anaerobic growth on ethanolamine. The gut normally converts ambient hydrogen sulfide to thiosulfate, which it then oxidizes further to tetrathionate during inflammation. Evidence is provided that S. Typhimurium's growth advantage in an inflamed gut is because of its ability to respire ethanolamine, which is released from host tissue, but is not utilizable by competing bacteria. By inducing intestinal inflammation, S. Typhimurium sidesteps nutritional competition and gains the ability to use an abundant simple substrate, ethanolamine, which is provided by the host.


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