Published July 27, 2017 | Version v1
Publication

Role of the RecBCD recombination pathway in Salmonella virulence

Description

Mutants of Salmonella enterica lacking the RecBC function are avirulent in mice and unable to grow inside macrophages (N. A. Buchmeier, C. J. Lipps, M. Y. H. So, and F. Heffron, Mol. Microbiol. 7:933-936, 1993). The virulence-related defects of RecBC- mutants are not suppressed by sbcB and sbcCD mutations, indicating that activation of the RecF recombination pathway cannot replace the virulence-related function(s) of RecBCD. Functions of the RecF pathway such as RecJ and RecF are not required for virulence. Since the RecBCD pathway, but not the RecF pathway, is known to participate in the repair of double-strand breaks produced during DNA replication, we propose that systemic infection by S. enterica may require RecBCD-mediated recombinational repair to prime DNA replication inside phagocytes. Mutants lacking both RecD and RecJ are also attenuated in mice and are unable to proliferate in macrophages, suggesting that exonucleases V and IX provide alternative functions for RecBCD-mediated recombinational repair during Salmonella infection.

Abstract

Dirección General de Enseñanza Superior PM97-0148-CO2

Abstract

Unión Europea QLK2-1999-00310

Abstract

Comunidad de Madrid 08.2/0045.1/2000

Additional details

Created:
March 27, 2023
Modified:
November 30, 2023