Identification of putative virulence factors from Campylobacter spp. isolated in Iceland

Two studies were conducted to determine putative virulence factors of Campylobacter spp. that were isolated in Iceland. The first study investigated capacitance monitoring using a simplified medium for efficient and reproducible construction of growth curves for Campylobacter spp., which can be a ti...

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Main Author: Akins, Edith Deann
Format: Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: uga 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10724/24812
http://purl.galileo.usg.edu/uga_etd/akins_edith_d_200808_phd
id ftunivgeorgia:oai:athenaeum.libs.uga.edu:10724/24812
record_format openpolar
spelling ftunivgeorgia:oai:athenaeum.libs.uga.edu:10724/24812 2023-05-15T16:50:01+02:00 Identification of putative virulence factors from Campylobacter spp. isolated in Iceland Akins, Edith Deann 2008-08 http://hdl.handle.net/10724/24812 http://purl.galileo.usg.edu/uga_etd/akins_edith_d_200808_phd eng eng uga akins_edith_d_200808_phd http://purl.galileo.usg.edu/uga_etd/akins_edith_d_200808_phd http://hdl.handle.net/10724/24812 public Campylobacter virulence capacitance Bactometer cell invasion microarray hybridization suppressive subtractive hybridization Dissertation 2008 ftunivgeorgia 2020-09-23T12:13:10Z Two studies were conducted to determine putative virulence factors of Campylobacter spp. that were isolated in Iceland. The first study investigated capacitance monitoring using a simplified medium for efficient and reproducible construction of growth curves for Campylobacter spp., which can be a time consuming and labor intensive process. When invasion assays are performed, it is required that Campylobacter spp. isolates be grown to a 68density of 10 to 10 CFU/ml. This investigation optimized conditions for use with the Bactometer® such that the determination of growth curves was achieved in a simple medium. Results suggested that isolates should be grown on Mueller Hinton plates under a microaerobic atmosphere (37¡C; 24 h), then transferred to Mueller Hinton biphasic cultures for 6 h (37¡C; microaerobic atmosphere). Serial dilutions should be used for inoculation of Bactometer® wells containing 1 mL Mueller Hinton broth plus 0.1M sodium pyruvate for obtaining growth curves. In the second study, putative virulence factors of Campylobacter spp. were investigated. Campylobacter spp. exhibited a wide distribution of adhesion and invasion ability, which was determined to be unrelated to flaA short variable region allele type. The second part of this study investigated the most invasive isolate 14118, the least invasive isolate, 13262, and two in between to further understanding of the molecular basis of genetic diversity among these 4 C. jejuni isolates. DNA-DNA microarray hybridizations identified genes absent relative to C. jejuni 11168 (PMSRU). Several absent genes were located in 1 of 7 previously described plasticity regions. There were 372 genes determined to be present in C. jejuni isolates 14118, 5116, 8557 and 13262 as well as C. jejuni 11168 (PMSRU). DNA suppressive subtractive hybridizations identified genes not in common with C. jejuni 11168 (PMSRU). C. jejuni 14118 contained a gene from C. doylei 269.97 that encoded for a motility accessory factor. C. jejuni 13262 contained a cytolethal distending toxin operon from C. lari. as well as a type II restriction modification enzyme unlike isolate 14118, 5116 and 8557 which includes a type I restriction modification enzyme. PhD Food Science and Technology Food Science Mark Harrison Mark Harrison Jinru Chen Mark Berrang Joseph Frank Kelli Hiett Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis Iceland University of Georgia: Athenaeum@UGA Kelli ENVELOPE(28.133,28.133,65.967,65.967) Mueller ENVELOPE(55.533,55.533,-66.917,-66.917)
institution Open Polar
collection University of Georgia: Athenaeum@UGA
op_collection_id ftunivgeorgia
language English
topic Campylobacter
virulence
capacitance
Bactometer
cell invasion
microarray hybridization
suppressive subtractive hybridization
spellingShingle Campylobacter
virulence
capacitance
Bactometer
cell invasion
microarray hybridization
suppressive subtractive hybridization
Akins, Edith Deann
Identification of putative virulence factors from Campylobacter spp. isolated in Iceland
topic_facet Campylobacter
virulence
capacitance
Bactometer
cell invasion
microarray hybridization
suppressive subtractive hybridization
description Two studies were conducted to determine putative virulence factors of Campylobacter spp. that were isolated in Iceland. The first study investigated capacitance monitoring using a simplified medium for efficient and reproducible construction of growth curves for Campylobacter spp., which can be a time consuming and labor intensive process. When invasion assays are performed, it is required that Campylobacter spp. isolates be grown to a 68density of 10 to 10 CFU/ml. This investigation optimized conditions for use with the Bactometer® such that the determination of growth curves was achieved in a simple medium. Results suggested that isolates should be grown on Mueller Hinton plates under a microaerobic atmosphere (37¡C; 24 h), then transferred to Mueller Hinton biphasic cultures for 6 h (37¡C; microaerobic atmosphere). Serial dilutions should be used for inoculation of Bactometer® wells containing 1 mL Mueller Hinton broth plus 0.1M sodium pyruvate for obtaining growth curves. In the second study, putative virulence factors of Campylobacter spp. were investigated. Campylobacter spp. exhibited a wide distribution of adhesion and invasion ability, which was determined to be unrelated to flaA short variable region allele type. The second part of this study investigated the most invasive isolate 14118, the least invasive isolate, 13262, and two in between to further understanding of the molecular basis of genetic diversity among these 4 C. jejuni isolates. DNA-DNA microarray hybridizations identified genes absent relative to C. jejuni 11168 (PMSRU). Several absent genes were located in 1 of 7 previously described plasticity regions. There were 372 genes determined to be present in C. jejuni isolates 14118, 5116, 8557 and 13262 as well as C. jejuni 11168 (PMSRU). DNA suppressive subtractive hybridizations identified genes not in common with C. jejuni 11168 (PMSRU). C. jejuni 14118 contained a gene from C. doylei 269.97 that encoded for a motility accessory factor. C. jejuni 13262 contained a cytolethal distending toxin operon from C. lari. as well as a type II restriction modification enzyme unlike isolate 14118, 5116 and 8557 which includes a type I restriction modification enzyme. PhD Food Science and Technology Food Science Mark Harrison Mark Harrison Jinru Chen Mark Berrang Joseph Frank Kelli Hiett
format Doctoral or Postdoctoral Thesis
author Akins, Edith Deann
author_facet Akins, Edith Deann
author_sort Akins, Edith Deann
title Identification of putative virulence factors from Campylobacter spp. isolated in Iceland
title_short Identification of putative virulence factors from Campylobacter spp. isolated in Iceland
title_full Identification of putative virulence factors from Campylobacter spp. isolated in Iceland
title_fullStr Identification of putative virulence factors from Campylobacter spp. isolated in Iceland
title_full_unstemmed Identification of putative virulence factors from Campylobacter spp. isolated in Iceland
title_sort identification of putative virulence factors from campylobacter spp. isolated in iceland
publisher uga
publishDate 2008
url http://hdl.handle.net/10724/24812
http://purl.galileo.usg.edu/uga_etd/akins_edith_d_200808_phd
long_lat ENVELOPE(28.133,28.133,65.967,65.967)
ENVELOPE(55.533,55.533,-66.917,-66.917)
geographic Kelli
Mueller
geographic_facet Kelli
Mueller
genre Iceland
genre_facet Iceland
op_relation akins_edith_d_200808_phd
http://purl.galileo.usg.edu/uga_etd/akins_edith_d_200808_phd
http://hdl.handle.net/10724/24812
op_rights public
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